Congrats: Lil Yachty Is Officially A Dad After Welcoming His First Child

By Kiyonna Anthony

October 21, 2021

Rolling Loud Southern California

Congrats are in order for Lil Yachty .

The 24-year old rapper recently welcomed his first child into the world earlier this month in New York City. Yachty is known for keeping mum about his personal life -- so much so that fans are still speculating on who the mother of his child could be. The Atlanta-bred star is reportedly in Manhattan spending time with his new born baby girl, however, he has yet to officially speak out on his new bundle of joy.

Fortunately, Yachty's baby girl won't have much to want for, considering that her dad has been making major money moves. The multi-million dollar rapper recently invested in the plant-based nutritional supplement brand PlantFuel alongside NFL Hall of Famer Terrell Owens , and put $1 million into a new, Jewish dating app called LoxClub. Yachty said of his PlantFuel move:

“I’m super excited about my new venture with PlantFuel. It’s brands like PlantFuel that inspire and allow me to stay actively involved creatively beyond just investing.”

The news of the rapper's emergence into fatherhood comes just days after he joined Tame Impala on their remix record to "Breathe Deeper." Yachty said of the remix record:

“It was so amazing to work with Kevin [Parker] as I’ve been a big fan since high school so it was a pleasant surprise and honor to be a part of such an incredible song."

The "Yacht Club" rapper hasn't let up when it comes to making new music. Along with "Breathe Deeper", Yachty recently dropped his Birthday Mix Vol. 6 mixtape featuring appearances from Lil Tecca and SoFaygo, and even contributed a song to Pokémon 25: The Album entitled "Believing".

Congrats to the new dad!

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Home » Biography » Celebrities » Musicians » Lil Yachty Biography: Age, Net Worth, Parents, Sibling, Girlfriend, Height, Children, Instagram, Wiki

lil yachty parents

Lil Yachty Biography: Age, Net Worth, Parents, Sibling, Girlfriend, Height, Children, Instagram, Wiki

lil yachty parents

Miles Parks McCollum , an American rapper, singer, songwriter, record producer, and actor, rose to fame in 2015 with his hit singles “One Night” and “Minnesota” from his EP Summer Songs. 

His debut mixtape, Lil Boat, was released in March 2016. Notably, in June of the same year,  Yachty  revealed that he had signed a joint venture record deal with Motown, Capitol Records, and Quality Control Music.

lil yachty parents

  • Full Name: Miles Parks McCollum
  • Stage Name: Lil Yachty
  • Born: August 23, 1997
  • Age: 26 years
  • Birthplace: Mableton, Georgia. 
  • Nationality: American
  • Occupation: Songwriter and Rapper
  • Height: 1.8 M
  • Parent: Shannon McCollum
  • Siblings: Kodie Shane
  • Spouse: Rubi Rose, India Love, and Megan Denise
  • Children: 1
  • Relationship: Dating
  • Net worth: $8 million

Early life and education

Lil Yachty,  the talented rapper and musician, came into this world on August 23, 1997, in the vibrant town of Mableton, Georgia. Growing up, he was fortunate to have a loving and supportive family. His father,  Shannon McCollum , played a significant role in shaping  Lil Yachty’s  life. 

While his mother’s name remains a mystery, her presence also influenced him. Moreover,  Lil Yachty  shared a special bond with his younger sister,  Kodie Shane . Together, they navigated the ups and downs of childhood and formed an unbreakable sibling connection.

Lil Yachty,  originally from Mableton, Georgia, attended Pebblebrook High School, excelled academically, and participated in football and drama clubs.

 Despite his achievements, he left high school during his senior year to dedicate himself to his music aspirations. Following this, he briefly enrolled at Alabama State University in 2015 but ultimately withdrew after a short period to concentrate solely on his music career.

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lil yachty parents

In 2017,  Lil Yachty  released his debut studio album, Teenage Emotions. He followed it up with two more studio albums, Lil Boat 2 and Nuthin’ 2 Prove, in 2018. In 2020, he released his highly anticipated album, Lil Boat 3. Yachty’s fifth studio album, Let’s Start Here, was released in 2023 and showcased his inspiration from psychedelic rock. 

His albums have achieved significant success on the Billboard charts, with Lil Boat 2 reaching number 2.  Yachty  has also released various mixtapes and EPs throughout his career, including his most recent project, Michigan Boy Boat, in 2021.

 In addition to his successful music career,  Lil Yachty  has expanded his talents into acting. This multi-talented artist has showcased his acting abilities in various films, including the 2019 movie “How High 2” and the 2018 animated film “Teen Titans Go! To the Movies.” 

Furthermore,  Yachty  has even taken on the role of a reality TV star, headlining his series titled “ Lil Yachty : The Boat Life” in 2017. With these diverse ventures,  Lil Yachty  continues to demonstrate his versatility and passion for entertaining audiences across different mediums.

Awards and Nominations

BET Hip Hop Awards

  • Best New Hip Hop Artist
  • Best Mixtape for Lil Boat
  • Best Club Banger for “One Night”
  • Best Collaboration for “Broccoli”
  • MTV Video Music Awards

Best New Artist (2016)

  • Teen Choice Awards
  • Choice Music: Breakout Artist 
  • Choice Music: Hip-Hop/R&B Song for “Broccoli”

Social Media

  • Twitter: @lilyachty
  • Instagram: @lilyachty 
  • Facebook: Lil Yachty Sailing Team
  • Snapchat: Lil Yachty
  • YouTube: Lil Yachty

Personal Life

Lil Yachty ‘s romantic history includes relationships with  Selangie Arlene Henriquez  in 2021,  India Love  in 2017,  Megan Denise  from 2017 to 2018,  Rubi Rose  from 2016 to 2017,  Kodie Shane ,  JT , and  Mariah the Scientist .

He has also encountered  Teanna Trump  in 2019 and  Blac Chyna  in 2017. Additionally,  Lil Yachty  began dating  Juliet Charlotte , also known as 222juliet , in December 2021.

lil yachty parents

Lil Yachty , 26, has chosen to keep his relationship status private and has not made any public statements regarding his romantic life. However, in the past, he has been rumored to be involved with a few notable women, such as  Rubi Rose,   India Love , and  Megan Denise.

 Despite these speculations,  Lil Yachty  has consistently denied being in a committed relationship with them.  Yachty  made an announcement on October 20, 2021, revealing that he has become a father to a baby girl. However, he has chosen not to disclose the identity of the child’s mother.

Discography

Studio albums:

  • Teenage Emotions 
  • Lil Boat 2 
  • Nuthin’ 2 Prove 
  • Lil Boat 3 
  • Let’s Start Here 
  • Lil Boat 
  • Summer Songs 2 
  • Collaborative mixtape:
  • A-Team: Familiar Territory 
  • Extended plays:
  • Summer Songs 
  • Birthday Mix 
  • Birthday Mix 2 
  • Birthday Mix 3 
  • Michigan Boy Boat 
  • “One Night” 
  • “Minnesota” 
  • “iSpy” (with Kyle) 
  • “Broccoli” (with DRAM) 
  • “Peekaboo” 
  • “Minnesota (Remix)” (with Quavo , Offset , and Takeoff)  
  • “Better” 
  • “All Around Me” (with Future) 
  • “Where U at?” (with Diplo ) 
  • “Oprah’s Bank Account” (with Drake and DaBaby ) 
  • “Popstar” (with Drake)
  • “Flex Up” 
  • “Oprah’s Bank Account (Remix)” (with Drake, DaBaby, and Lil Baby ) 
  • “Lil Boat 3” 
  • “Michigan Boy Boat” (with Tee Grizzley, Offset , and Lil Durk ) 
  • “Hit Bout It” (with Playboi Carti)

Lil Yachty  has an estimated net worth of $8 million. This significant wealth has been accumulated primarily through his successful music career, where he likely earned substantial amounts from album sales, concerts, and royalties. 

His financial success can also be attributed to endorsement deals with various brands and involvement in other profitable business ventures.

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About That Yacht Life: How Teen Rapper Lil Yachty Made It Big

Meet the 18-year-old Atlanta rapper and Yeezy model making waves.

Card-2-raw_57.jpg

It was 3 p.m. on a Wednesday in New York, and the 18-year-old rapper Miles Parks McCollum, known to everyone as Lil Yachty, could not stop yawning. His bedazzled grill caught the overhead light of a Chinatown hotel room with each Wookie-like yawp; beneath his beaded red braids, it was almost impossible to tell whether or not his eyes were open.

His voice, which had the hypnotic drawl of a Novocaine-induced stupor, only reinforced the appearance of sleepiness. Only when the subject of Supreme surfaced did he perk up: “It went from me going in there to shop, to them playing my music now,” he declared. His friend Chalis, who came up with Yachty in Atlanta, reminded him that they once saw Joe Jonas in the store. Everyone in the room, including other core members of the “Sailing Team”—producer “Burberry Perry” and “Bloody Osiris,” plus Yachty’s manager, who goes by “ Coach K “—busted out laughing.

“I forgot we seen him,” Yachty recalled with a smirk.

Yachty, who came to seemingly everyone’s attention when he modeled in Kanye West’s Yeezy Season 3 show, wore a velvet Supreme sweat suit and Gucci slide sandals. On his neck hung a sizable diamond-encrusted gold medallion with the letters “QC,” which stand for Quality Control. Having only started making music a year ago, this is apparently the prize for going from no one to someone, boy to man, boat to yacht.

Lil Yachty, Perry, Chalis, and Osiris

lil-yahty-arcade.jpg

“In high school, there was a group of older kids who called themselves the ‘Yacht Club,’” Yachty said of his stage name. “I was trying to get in the club.” They eventually let him in, but he had to start from the bottom as Lil Boat, which has since become his alter-ego. “They’re the same person,” Yachty continued. “Same soul. Same body. But one is more calm and the other is more aggressive.”

Chalis, who is two years older, was one of the charter members of the Yacht Club. “We were starting waves,” he said. “We used to record in my closet in Atlanta. We had a bum-ass mic and we put a sock on it. We had nothing.” After graduating, Chalis sailed off to New York. Once he was installed there, Yachty sent him a list of kids he followed on Instagram for Chalis to befriend. The advance team set the table for last summer, when Yachty arrived in town to stay with Chalis; together, they broke onto the scene, successfully networking with the likes of Ian Connor and Eileen Kelly .

“I just thought I’d give it a shot,” said Yachty. “I just wanted to get cool.” He shrugged and then paused, as if his rapid success had finally just hit him. “I was just in a dorm room. I was at Alabama State—I was literally just there !”

Last week, Yachty attracted a crowd so large at his VFiles show that the police had to barricade the street. He then went on to perform at the Museum of Modern Art, followed by a show in Philadelphia with Young Thug. On Tuesday, he released his music video for “ 1 Night ,” which is quickly making its rounds on the Internet for its meme-friendly visuals. “He’s one of the most focused young guys I’ve ever met,” said Coach K, who’s worked with stars like Young Jeezy, Migos, and Gucci Mane. “He’s going to be really big .”

When he’s onstage, Yachty comes to life. In one clip of a performance posted to his Instagram, he jumps up and down so energetically that his sweatpants practically fall off. His hair thwacks his face in sync with the beat. He dives into the audience. He is buoyant, like, well, a yacht.

Yeezy Season 3 at Madison Square Garden. Photo by Getty Images.

GettyImages-509646998.jpg

“He’s got a lot of little white boy fans,” Osiris said of the usual crowd.

“Like lemme-get-a-pic-for-the-gram !” Burberry Perry chimed in.

Music is something that Yachty simply tried, and found that he had a knack for it. “Growing up, my dad used to play India Arie, Coldplay, and Paul McCartney ,” he recalled. His father, Shannon McCollum , is a photographer who’s worked with everyone from Outkast to Dead Prez, so maybe the spotlight is the beam by which Yachty was meant to chart his route. His raps, which have the same hazy quality of his speaking voice and are infused with nonchalant humor, have little to do with the trap artists—like Migos, Young Thug, Young Jeezy, and Future—that came before him in Atlanta. In fact, Yachty claimed he’s not interested in the genre; instead, he described his sound as “colorful” and “soft.”

Meet Lil Yachty, the Teen Rapper Making Waves

lil yachty parents

Louis Vuitton shirt, $850, louisvuitton.com ; Dries Van Noten tank top, $140, barneys.com ; Ami trousers, $355, amiparis.fr .

lil yachty parents

Raf Simons v-neck knit, $1,700, rafsimons.com ; Theory T-shirt, $75, theory.com ; Ami trousers, $355, amiparis.fr ; Converse sneakers, $55, converse.com ; Lil Yachty’s own jewelry.

lil yachty parents

Louis Vuitton shirt, $850, louisvuitton.com ; Dries Van Noten tank top, $140, barneys.com ; Lil Yachty’s own jewelry.

lil yachty parents

Prada shirt, $710, and sweater, $930, prada.com ; Ami pants, $350, amiparis.fr ; Falke socks, $28, sockhopny.com ; Louis Vuitton sneakers, $785, louisvuitton.com ; Lil Yachty’s own jewelry.

“When you think of trap, it’s like hard, gutter stuff,” explained Chalis, whose job description seems to be happily filling in Yachty’s long silences. “But we’re young kids; we’re not like that. Obviously, we love trap and are influenced by where we come from, but Yachty is fun. His voice is angelic! A lot of rap you can’t relate to, but Yachty is young. Not even a year ago he was a regular civilian.”

While Yachty claimed the only music he listens to is his own, his friends name-dropped people like Lil Uzi Vert , who is 21. “Why so many Lil’s?” I asked.

“It’s because everyone wants to be a kid again,” explained Osiris.

I turned to Yachty and asked him what else he might hope to accomplish next. He stretched out his arms and yawned deeply, and then mumbled something in his drowsy baritone.

“You want to what?” I asked.

Yachty stuck his hand down his Nautica boxer shorts and closed his eyes: “I just want to be mainstream.”

lil yachty parents

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How Lil Yachty Got His Second Act

By Jeff Ihaza

Until the pandemic, Lil Yachty never stopped to think about how quickly he became famous. “It was a full year from walking across the stage in high school to then I’m in this penthouse in midtown Atlanta , I got this G-wagon, put my mother in a house,” Yachty explains. “It’s a fast life. You not ever getting the chance to think about a lot of shit.”

Yachty’s 2016 hit “Minnesota,” which had the treacly energy of a nursery rhyme, earned the then-17-year-old the title “King of the Teens.” But since then, he’s become an elder statesman of a certain brand of young superstar — and something like the Gen Z answer to Diddy. He collaborated with brands like Nautica and Target; he appeared in the movie How High 2 ; he signed an endorsement deal with Sprite. Signees to his new label imprint, Concrete Boys, even get an iced-out chain.

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Born Miles Parks McCollum, Yachty embodies many of the ways the music industry has changed in the past decade. He rose to fame on the internet and commands attention with or without new music. Over Zoom in March, he’s calm and reserved, pausing intently before he responds to questions. The youthful exuberance is still there, though. At one point, his mom, who lives nearby, calls to ask what he wants from the grocery store. “I need Pop-Tarts,” he says sweetly. “I really want them cinnamon-bun Pop-Tarts.”

He can afford lots of Pop-Tarts. Yachty reportedly made $13 million on endorsements in 2016 and 2017. (“Work hard, play hard,” he responds when asked about the number.) He spends more than $50,000 a month on various expenses, according to one recent headline. (“If anything I pay a little more. I have many assets and insurance, plus an elaborate payroll.”) He’s working on a Reese’s Puffs cereal collaboration, a film based on the card game Uno, and he was one of the first rappers to hop on the crypto craze, selling something called a “YachtyCoin” last December in an auction on the platform Nifty Gateway. According to a report from Coinbase, the token sold for $16,050. Yachty explains that when he was first discovered by Quality Control records founder Kevin “Coach K” Lee, “one of the biggest things he talked about was being a brand. Being bigger than just an artist — being a mogul.” 

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In fact, collaboration has come to be a useful tool for Yachty as he sheds the King of the Teens title for something more akin to a rap mogul. “I only work with people I have friendships with, who I really admire,” Yachty says. “And I love working with newer artists, up-and-coming artists.”  Within the world of hip-hop, Yachty has found for himself somewhere between a megastar and internet hero, and it would appear that he’s just settling in. “I just fuck with new talent. Not even like, ‘let me sign you, get under my wing,’ ” he explains. “Just ‘hey, I’ve been in this spot before. I know what that’s like, bada bing, bada boom.’ ”

Yachty started Concrete Boys last year. One of the first signees was his childhood friend Draft Day, who offers one of the more exciting features on Lil Boat 3, on the cut “Demon Time.” “I feel old sometimes,” Yachty admits. “I feel old as fuck when someone’s popping and I don’t know who they are. Which is rare, because I be on my shit.”

Yachty is also at the forefront of a new realm of social platforms, namely Twitch and Discord, that engender more direct communication within communities. Yachty frequently talks directly to fans on both platforms, and in April he collaborated with Discord on “sound packs,” which allowed users to replace the app’s normal notifications with sounds he created. 

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I ask Yachty where he sees himself in five years. “Hopefully, a really successful actor,” he responds. “And with a bangin’ eight pack. I’ll probably cut my hair up, maybe a little beard. Real sex-symbol shit, you know what I’m saying?” For Yachty, who opened the door to a new brand of celebrity rapper, it doesn’t register as wishful thinking. His enduring celebrity is proof of what’s possible with a solid flow and internet savvy. “I just want to do everything. Because I’ve realized I can,” Yachty explains. “I’ve learned the power I have. The only thing stopping me is me, for real.”

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Lil Yachty: The Boundary-Breaking Prince of Hip Hop

  • by history tools
  • November 19, 2023

As a long-time Lil Yachty fan, I‘m excited to provide a detailed overview of this unique, influential hip hop artist. Here‘s the essential info you need to know:

American rapper/singer Lil Yachty gained recognition on the internet in 2015 for his unique "bubblegum trap" music. With his playful lyrical style and relentlessly positive personality, Yachty has become one of the most refreshing new voices in hip hop.

Biography and Early Life

Lil Yachty grew up as Miles McCollum in the Atlanta suburbs. He was raised by a single mother along with his three siblings. As a socially awkward teen, he found solace in hip hop and taught himself to rap and produce beats on his laptop.

Yachty adopted his nautical stage name after developing a fascination with the hip hop group The Sailing Team. While briefly attending high school, he got suspended for poor grades before dropping out to focus on music full-time.

Rise to Fame

Yachty first exploded onto the SoundCloud scene in 2015 with tracks like "Minnesota" and "One Night." His laidback rapping blended with sugary sweet R&B melodies created a distinctive youthful sound now dubbed "bubblegum trap."

After getting co-signed by hip hop collective Quality Control, Lil Yachty released his viral debut mixtape Lil Boat in 2016. Led by hits like "1Night" and "Broccoli," the mixtape propelled Yachty into the mainstream and peaked at #2 on the Rap Charts.

The young Atlanta sensation cemented himself as a new prince of hip hop by landing endorsement deals with Target and Sprite. His infectiously playful image resonated with youth culture and amassed Yachty millions of teenage fans.

Music Style & Impact

What separates Lil Yachty is his refreshing, unapologetic rebelliousness. While old heads criticized his distorted vocals and lack of bars, Yachty laughed his haters off and forged his own lane.

His ambient, sun-soaked production and earnest lyrical content defied hip hop conventions. Yachty even boldly proclaimed he "does not care about lyrics" in a heated viral debate with rapper Joe Budden.

Yet his signature sound undoubtedly left a mark. Yachty demonstrated melodic rap could dominate the mainstream and opened the floodgates for similar artists like Lil Uzi Vert. While his own bars are simple, his cultural impact is undeniable.

Notable Achievements

  • 4 studio albums, including 2 Top 5 Billboard 200 projects
  • Sold out first headlining tour in 2017
  • 14 Billboard Hot 100 hits like "iSpy" and "Oprah‘s Bank Account"
  • Over 5 million digital singles sold
  • Launched his own fashion line with Nautica & Urban Outfitters
  • Starred in HBO series Euphoria and films like How High 2

For a young artist of only 26, Yachty boasts an impressively extensive resume. His cultural influence even earned him a spot performing at Obama‘s White House in 2016.

Why Lil Yachty Matters

As a long-time fan, here are just some of the reasons I feel Lil Yachty matters both as an artist and role model:

  • He celebrates individuality and self-love. Yachty reminds people it‘s cool to just be yourself, regardless of what anyone else thinks.
  • His positivity is infectious. While plenty of hip hop fixates on darkness, Yachty provides a reminder to keep our heads up.
  • He makes hip hop fun again. With his oddball samples from Rugrats and joyful energy, Yachty takes the music back to carefree basics.
  • He inspires underdogs. Coming up as a social outcast, Yachty gives hope that with determination and creativity, anything is possible.

Fun Facts About Lil Boat

  • He‘s a skateboarding enthusiast and even has a skate crew called The Sailing Team.
  • Yachty collects rare basketball cards and considers it one of his biggest passions. His card collection is worth over $500,000!
  • Before rapping, he did some modeling work and walked runway shows for Kanye‘s Yeezy fashion line.
  • Yachty admits he still lives with his mom in his hometown of Atlanta.
  • His real name "Miles" is a nod to legendary jazz musician Miles Davis.

The Future is Bright for Lil Boat

Even after breaking through in monumental fashion, at just 26 years old, Lil Yachty is truly just getting started. He continues dropping acclaimed projects, starring in films and TV shows, and expanding his fashion empire.

Yet no matter how massive a celebrity Yachty becomes, he never seems to lose touch with that sincere, youthful spirit that makes his music magical. For old and new fans alike, it‘s exciting to think what the future has in store for the King of Teenage Emotions himself.

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A pair of stoners embark on a pot-fueled adventure through Atlanta to find their missing weed. A pair of stoners embark on a pot-fueled adventure through Atlanta to find their missing weed. A pair of stoners embark on a pot-fueled adventure through Atlanta to find their missing weed.

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  • Trivia The sequel to How High was considered in the late 2000s with Redman and Method Man. But it was on hold because Universal did not want to fund it. In late 2015, Redman stated that Danny DeVito signed him and Method Man back onto the film and a script was being written. He further stated that it would be released in 2017. In early 2017, the script has been rewritten because Redman and Method Man did not like the earlier drafts. Redman hoped to start filming between late 2017 and early 2018. As of late 2017, Redman said that it was being rewritten again. In addition, he said that he and Method Man would not be doing the film if the script would not be funny. The script got rewritten again in mid-2018 as MTV teamed up with Universal 1440. When production started in September 2018, Redman stated that he and Method Man were unaware about the fact that Universal 1440 and MTV went ahead with the sequel and didn't contact them until the beginning of production. Redman and Method Man declined to return when they got contacted after production began with Lil' Yachty and DC Young Fly. Now the sequel is an extremely insulting horrible unfunny straight to TV film that just used the How High brand name and certain celebrities to attract viewers.
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Music Features

Lil yachty's delightfully absurd path to 'let's start here'.

Matthew Ramirez

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LOS ANGELES, CA - OCTOBER 29: Lil Yachty performs on the Stage during day 2 of Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival 2017 at Exposition Park on October 29, 2017 in Los Angeles, California. Rich Fury/Getty Images hide caption

LOS ANGELES, CA - OCTOBER 29: Lil Yachty performs on the Stage during day 2 of Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival 2017 at Exposition Park on October 29, 2017 in Los Angeles, California.

Lil Yachty often worked better as an idea than a rapper. The late-decade morass of grifters like Lil Pump, amidst the self-serious reign of Future and Drake (eventual Yachty collaborators, for what it's worth), created a demand for something lighter, someone charismatic, a throwback to a time in the culture when characters like Biz Markie could score a hit or Kool Keith could sustain a career in one hyper-specific lane of rap fandom. Yachty fulfilled the role: His introduction to many was through a comedy skit soundtracked by his viral breakout "1 Night," which tapped into the song's deadpan delivery and was the perfect complement for its sleepy charm. The casual fan knows him best for a pair of collaborations in 2016: as one-half of the zeitgeist-defining single "Broccoli" with oddity D.R.A.M., or "iSpy," a top-five pop hit with backpack rapper Kyle. Yachty embodied the rapper as larger-than-life character — from his candy-colored braids to his winning smile — and while the songs themselves were interesting, you could be forgiven for wondering if there was anything substantial behind the fun, the grounds for the start of a long career.

As if to supplement his résumé, Yachty seemed to emerge as a multimedia star. Perhaps you remember him in a Target commercial; heard him during the credits for the Saved by the Bell reboot; spotted him on a cereal box; saw him co-starring in the ill-fated 2019 sequel to How High . TikTok microcelebrity followed. Then the sentences got more and more absurd: Chef Boyardee jingle with Donny Osmond; nine-minute video cosplaying as Oprah; lead actor in an UNO card game movie. Somewhere in a cross-section of pop-culture detritus and genuine hit-making talent is where Yachty resides. That he didn't fade away immediately is a testament to his charm as a cultural figure; Yachty satisfied a need, and in his refreshingly low-stakes appeal, you could imagine him as an MTV star in an alternate universe. Move the yardstick of cultural cachet from album sales to likes and he emerges as a generation-defining persona, if not musician.

Early success and exposure can threaten anyone's career, none so much as those connected to the precarious phenomenon of SoundCloud rap. Yachty's initial peak perhaps seeded his desire years later to sincerely pursue artistry with Let's Start Here , an album fit for his peculiar trajectory, because throughout the checks from Sprite and scolding Ebro interviews he never stopped releasing music, seemingly to satisfy no one other than himself and the generation of misfits that he seemed to be speaking for.

But to oversell him as a personality belittles his substantial catalog. Early mixtapes like Lil Boat and Summer Songs 2 , which prophetically brought rap tropes and pop sounds into harmony, were sustained by the teenage artist's commitment to selling the vibe of a track as he warbled its memorable hook. It was perhaps his insistence to demonstrate that he could rap, too, that most consistently pockmarked his output during this period. These misses were the necessary growing pains of a kid still finding his footing, and through time and persistence, a perceived weakness became a strength. Where his peers Lil Uzi Vert and Playboi Carti found new ways to express themselves in music, Yachty dug in his heels and became Quality Control's oddball representative, acquitting himself on guest appearances and graduating from punchline rapper to respectable vet culminating in the dense and rewarding Lil Boat 3 from 2020, Yachty's last official album.

Which is why the buzzy, viral "Poland" from the end of 2022 hit different — Yachty tapped back into the same lively tenor of his early breakthroughs. The vibrato was on ten, the beat menaced and hummed like a broken heater, he rapped about taking cough syrup in Poland, it was over in under two minutes and endlessly replayable. Yachty has already lived a full career arc in seven years — from the 2016 king of the teens, to budding superstar, to pitchman, to regional ambassador. But following "Poland" with self-aware attempts at similar virality would be a mistake, and you can't pivot your way to radio stardom after a hit like that, unless you're a marketing genius like Lil Nas X. How does he follow up his improbable second chance to grab the zeitgeist?

Lil Yachty, 'Poland'

#NowPlaying

Lil yachty, 'poland'.

Let's Start Here is Lil Yachty's reinvention, a born-again Artist's Statement with no rapping. It's billed as psychedelic rock but has a decidedly accessible sound — the sun-kissed warmth of an agreeable Tame Impala song, with bounce-house rhythms and woozy guitars in the mode of Magdalena Bay and Mac DeMarco (both of whom guest on the album) — something that's not quite challenging but satisfying nonetheless. Contrast with 2021's Michigan Boy Boat , where Yachty performed as tour guide through Michigan rap: His presence was auxiliary by function on that tape, as he ceded the floor to Babyface Ray, Sada Baby and Rio Da Yung OG; it was tantalizing curation, if not a work of his own personal artistry. It's tempting to cast Let's Start Here as another act of roleplay, but what holds this album together is Yachty's magnetic pull. Whether or not you're someone who voluntarily listens to the Urban Outfitters-approved slate of artists he's drawing upon, his star presence is what keeps you engaged here.

Yachty has been in the studio recording this album since 2021, and the effort is tangible. He didn't chase "Poland" with more goofy novelties, but he also didn't spit this record out in a month. Opener (and highlight) "The Black Seminole" alternates between Pink Floyd and Jimi Hendrix-lite references. It's definitely a gauntlet thrown even if halfway through you start to wonder where Yachty is. The album's production team mostly consists of Patrick Wemberly (formerly of Chairlift), Jacob Portrait (of Unknown Mortal Orchestra), Jeremiah Raisen (who's produced for Charli XCX, Sky Ferreira and Drake) and Yachty himself, who's established himself as a talented producer since his early days. (MGMT's Ben Goldwasser also contributed.) The group does a formidable job composing music that is dense and layered enough to register as formally unconventional, if not exactly boundary-pushing. Yachty frequently reaches for his "Poland"-inspired uber-vibrato, which adds a bewitching texture to the songs, placing him in the center of the track. Other moments that work: the spoken-word interlude "Failure," thanks to contemplative strumming from Alex G, and "The Ride," a warm slow-burn that coasts on a Jam City beat, giving the album a lustrous Night Slugs moment. "I've Officially Lost Vision" thrashes like Yves Tumor.

Yet the best songs on Let's Start Here push Yachty's knack for hooks and snaking melodies to the fore and rely less on studio fireworks — the laid-back groove of "Running Out of Time," the mournful post-punk of "Should I B?" and the slow burn of "Pretty," which features a bombastic turn from vocalist Foushee. That Yachty's vaunted indie collaborators were able to work in simpatico with him proves his left-of-center bonafides. It's a reminder that he's often lined his projects with successful non-rap songs, curios like "Love Me Forever" from Lil Boat 2 and "Worth It" from Nuthin' 2 Prove . That renders Let's Start Here a less startling turn than it may appear at first glance, and also underlines his recurring talent for making off-kilter pop music, a gift no matter the perceived genre.

At a listening event for the record, Yachty stated: "I created [this] because I really wanted to be taken seriously as an artist. Not just some SoundCloud rapper, not some mumble rapper. Not some guy that just made one hit," seemingly aware of the culture war within his own genre and his place along the spectrum of low- to highbrow. To be sure, whether conscious of it or not, this kind of mentality is dismissive of rap music as an artform, and also undermines the good music Yachty has made in the past. Holing up in the studio to make digestibly "weird" indie-rock with a cast of talented white people isn't intrinsically more artistic or valid than viral hits or a one-off like "Poland." But this statement scans less as self-loathing and more as a renewed confidence, a tribute to the album's collective vision. And people like Joe Budden have been saying "I don't think Yachty is hip-hop " since he started. So what if he wants to break rank now?

Lil Yachty entered the cultural stage at 18, and has grown up in public. It adds up that, now 25, he would internalize all the scrutiny he's received and wish to cement his artistry after a few thankless years rewriting the rules for young, emerging rappers. Let's Start Here may not be the transcendent psychedelic rock album that he seeks, but it is reflective of an era of genreless "vibes" music. Many young listeners likely embraced Yachty and Tame Impala simultaneously; it tracks he would want to bring these sounds together in a genuine attempt to reach a wider audience. Nothing about this album is cynical, but it is opportunistic, a creation in line with both a shameless mixed-media existence and his everchanging pop alchemy. The "genre" tag in streaming metadata means less than it ever has. Credit to Yachty for putting that knowledge to use.

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Lil Yachty: The Full Profile

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Home » Artist » Lil Yachty: The Full Profile

As someone who would describe himself as more of an artist than a rapper, Lil Yachty burst onto the scene in 2016 after one of his SoundCloud tracks went viral. Since then, his aptitude on social media has kept him afloat and kept the collaboration requests rolling in. But what type of a man is Lil Yachty really, and what does the future have in store for him?

Lil Yachty was born under the name Miles Parks McCollum in Mableton, Georgia. He grew up in Atlanta and was introduced to a life of media production through his father, Shannon McCollum, a well-known photographer. At an early age, he became accustomed to being in front of a camera and was introduced to music of many genres, inspiring him to be someone that didn’t hold to one version of what art could be. His musical influences ranged from the likes of Kanye West and Soulja Boy to Coldplay and Fall Out Boy to classics like the Beatles.  

Growing up, Lil Yachty wasn’t afraid to stand out. He liked fashion, he liked bright colors, and he was bullied for it. But he always knew that his differences were what made him stand apart from others, distinct and memorable instead of fading into the background. He would use that to build his brand and his following. 

Going Viral: A Burgeoning Career

Lil Yachty has been grouped with a new generation of rappers. These rappers gain huge fan bases from social media and achieve fame by going viral off Soundcloud and other media platforms. The longevity of their careers depends on if they can adapt to the new trends and keep their fans while remaining distinctly themselves. 

The Beginning of Lil Yachty, the Artist

In 2015, Miles Parks McCollum decided to move to New York City after living in Atlanta and working at McDonald’s. He stayed with a friend and lived humbly, slowly building up his social media presence and networking skills. This slow pace led to him attending college at Alabama State University for what would only be a short two months, before he decided to move back and fully dedicate himself to cultivating a network of like-minded artists. Thus, Miles McCollum became Lil Yachty.

Going Viral

Lil Yachty got his start on Soundcloud, where his song “One Night” went viral after it was used in a comedy video. With these newfound thousands of eyes on him, he was able to capitalize on his months of hard work networking with fashion personalities and get a job modeling for Kanye West’s 2016 Yeezy show in Madison Square Garden. 

Soon after his modeling exposure, he released his first mixtape Lil Boat , which peaked at 106th on the US Billboard 200. The rest of 2016 was filled with successful collaborations and featuring spots. Two features in particular, on “Broccoli” by DRAM and “iSpy” by Kyle, were extremely well received and were nominated for numerous awards, putting Lil Yachty firmly in the public eye. 

Signing With a Label

Nearly a year after signing a joint record deal with Motown Records, Quality Control Music, and Capitol Records, Lil Yachty released his first full-length studio album, Teenage Emotions, in May of 2017. The album peaked at 5th on the US Billboard 200 and paved the way for two additional studio albums released in 2018, Lil Boat 2 and Nuthin’ 2 Prove respectively. 

Throughout 2019 and 2020, Lil Yachty continued his streak of features and collaborations with other artists until he released his fourth studio album in May of 2020, Lil Boat 3 . The album peaked at 14th on the US Billboard 200, the lowest position of any of his albums. However, the lower ranking of his last album didn’t deter the rapper’s determination at all. In fact, it was seemingly bolstered by the fact that Drake , a man who Lil Yachty has long looked up to and idolized, featured on one of Lil Yachty’s Lil Boat 3 tracks, “Oprah’s Bank Account.” 

Image and Musical Style

A unique figure in the crowd, Lil Yachty has long said he doesn’t want to be put in a mold, stuck in one genre or image. He wants to be considered an artist more than a rapper. 

When Lil Yachty broke out on the scene, he was instantly recognizable for his brightly dyed red hair with beads, usually styled artfully in his face. However, 2020 saw the rapper ditch the red braids for his natural black color. Although some fans tried to analyze it as a sign of a turn to darker tones in his music, Lil Yachty has maintained that (much like Ariana Grande) his new hair is due to the strain that the red dye had on his hair, causing it to not grow correctly and to even fall out. So yes, the red dye is gone, but he still maintains his braids and beads. 

Although Lil Yachty once was well known for his sparkling grill, nowadays, you’ll see him rocking a pair of very expensive veneers, as has been the trend for social media stars in 2020. 

As someone who has deliberately kept a more mysterious and yet still open persona, Lil Yachty doesn’t have a specific style. Or, at least he won’t share it. He seems to be open to all types of fashion but isn’t one to follow specific trends. He does what he feels looks and feels right in the moment, whether it be matching his beads to his clothes or admiring crop tops on men. 

For a man with such a unique combination of influences, styles, likes, and dislikes, defining him is actually very straightforward. He’s easygoing. This easygoing nature is what has appealed to his fans for so long. He’s humorous, fun, and distinctly lighthearted, a recipe for success on social media. 

Musical Style

Early on in his career, Lil Yachty’s music was disregarded by established rappers who thought his generation of Soundcloud rappers wasn’t authentic or real to the genre. He was accused of being style over substance, with his rap style specifically being called “ mumble rap .”

These early criticisms didn’t seem to phase Lil Yachty much, as he had long wanted himself to be genre-defying with his music anyways. He rejected restrictions of what people consider to be real rap. As his fanbase is mainly young like him, he wants to remain relatable, wholesome even, wanting to rap more about teenage life than alcohol and drugs. In fact, in his early days, he claimed to not like the taste of alcohol or the effects of drugs, saying he didn’t need either in his life. 

Lil Yachty has described his music as “happy bubblegum trap” and “boat music,” an interesting choice of description since three of his four albums are named Lil Boat 1 , Lil Boat 2 , and Lil Boat 3 .

He wants his music to be fun and genre defying. To that end, he raps about video games and samples music and themes from cartoons to include in his songs. Lighthearted and fun, Lil Yachty doesn’t want his music to be a copy of rappers before him; he wants to be distinctly unique. An artist more than a rapper, a recognizable brand above all else. 

Accomplishments

With 14 songs on the Billboard Hot 100 Songs, four full studio albums, and a fervent young fan base founded on social media, Lil Yachty is quickly blazing a path in the music industry. He continues to reap the rewards of his hard-won networking skills, collaborating with dozens of rappers and producers – some up and coming, while others are people he has admired for ages. In 2016, he even appeared in a Sprite commercial with Lebron James, expanding his network even further beyond artists in the music business.  

Lil Yachty has appeared in three movies: Life-Size 2: A Christmas Eve , Long Shot , and How High 2 . He has also done voice work in one animated movie: Teen Titans Go! To the Movies . 

Awards – Songs

“Broccoli” by Dram featuring Lil Yachty

  • 2017 Billboard Music Awards nominations for top rap collaboration, top rap song, and top audio streaming song 
  • 2017 MTV Video Music Awards nominations for best hip hop video and best collaboration. 
  • 2017 Grammy nomination for best rap/sung collection. 

“iSpy” by Kyle featuring Lil Yachty

  • 2017 MTV Video Music Awards nomination for best visual effects.
  • 2017 MTV Europe Music Awards nomination for best video. 

Awards – Personal

  • 2017 iHeartRadio Much Music Video Awards nomination for best new international artist.  

Personal Life

Although he gained fame through social media, Lil Yachty’s personal life has been fairly quiet when compared to the blatant over-exposure of other artists and influencers. 

Famous Friends and Feuds

At the beginning of his career, Lil Yachty was a part of a group called The Sailing Team, composed of other rappers and producers such as K$upreme, Burberry Perry, and his own sister Kodie Shane. However, since 2019 Lil Yachty has stated that The Sailing Team is no more, claiming that his effort in the group outweighed the rest of their contributions. 

Lil Yachty gained his initial fame from social media. He owes much to it, and yet it has also landed him in controversy and feuds. Most controversy comes from his twitter account, and song lyrics, namely his song “E-ER,” which fans have felt sexualizes a female TikTok star inappropriately. 

One of Lil Yachty’s most famous controversies was a three-day feud with Soulja Boy over a photo and leaked audio. It resulted in a public reconciliation over social media and a few extra thousand followers each for them. 

Issues With the Law

In 2015, Lil Yachty was arrested in Florida for credit card fraud and stayed in jail until he paid a bail of $11,000. He cited the incident as something he never wanted to repeat. However, the dreaded year of 2020 brought more issues with the law in the form of speeding and crashing Ferraris. 

He is also currently being sued for assault and battery following an altercation with a man during the 2019 Rolling Loud festival. 

What’s Next?

Lil Yachty has promised his fans new music for 2021 and has so far released a music video called “ Royal Rumble ,” a collaboration with six other rappers all hailing from Michigan. He also has plans to tour starting in May, with a stop at the Rolling Loud Festival in Portugal in June. 

Beyond music, he will have a role in the upcoming Mattel Films movie based on the game Uno. So far, it is said to be a heist movie based in Atlanta, following Atlanta’s underground hip hop culture. 

Other than that, he stays a constant influence on social media, recently showing off his closet and impressive collection of shoes. As someone who was built on the backbone of social media, the race to stay relevant is ever important to an artist such as Lil Yachty. The music industry held more interest in him in the beginning of his career, as he had skyrocketed so fast and so young into the public eye. However, Lil Yachty still peaks interest and is bound to remain in the game for a while, if at least due to his business skills. 

The Sudden Rise of Lil Yachty | NY Times

They Came From Soundcloud: Lil Uzi Vert and the 6 Rappers Who Could Be Rock Stars | W Magazine

Lil Yachty Drops New Video for Michigan Hip-Hop Posse Cut ‘Royal Rumble’ | Rolling Stone

Lil Yachty | Biography & History | All Music

Lil Yachty Says He Stopped Trying To Promote The Sailing Team Because They Were “Really Lazy” | Genius  

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Lil Yachty Joins #GirlDad Club After Welcoming 1st Child - But Who's The Mother?

Lil Yachty might want to consider dropping the “Lil” from his name after becoming a father for the first time.

According to TMZ , the 24-year-old Atlanta rapper welcomed the birth of his first child, a daughter, in the last few weeks. Sources say he’s been spending time with his baby girl in New York City, where she was born.

Lil Yachty is a father for the first time. https://t.co/UQUQOIeNgH — TMZ (@TMZ) October 20, 2021

The identity of the child’s mother has yet to be revealed and it’s unclear whether Lil Yachty is still in a relationship with the mother. The Quality Control rapper was most recently linked to New York-based fashion designer Selangie , although it’s believed the couple split earlier this year.

Lil Yachty has been keeping his bundle of joy a secret on social media, with no mention of her birth (or his baby mama’s pregnancy) on his Instagram or Twitter feeds. However, Yachty did share a photo of himself posted up in Manhattan last week.

View this post on Instagram A post shared by ^CONCRETE BOY BOAT^ ?? (@lilyachty)

The only allusion Yachty has made to becoming a father came back in August when he tweeted a video of Big Boi performing his baby mama drama-filled verse on Outkast’s “Ms. Jackson,” along with the caption, “A flawless verse.” Although it’s entirely possible Lil Boat just loves the song.

A flawless verse.. @BigBoi pic.twitter.com/2W1nfoR2Tu — concrete boy boat (@lilyachty) August 10, 2021

Lil Yachty has certainly been putting himself in a position to provide for his newborn daughter. Aside from his multi-platinum rap career, the 24-year-old entered the $1.5 trillion wellness industry earlier this year by investing in the plant-based nutritional supplement brand PlantFuel alongside NFL Hall of Famer Terrell Owens.

Previously, Yachty plunged $1 million into the popular Jewish dating app Lox Club through his and Bhad Bhabie’s Scoop Investments venture capital fund.

related news

Lil Yachty Breaks Down His $50K Monthly Expenses To Gillie Da Kid & Wallo267's ‘Million Dollaz Worth of Game’ Podcast

March 22, 2021

On the music tip, Lil Yachty recently dropped a new song called “ Believing ” as part of Pokémon 25: The Album , a project celebrating the 25th anniversary of the iconic Japanese franchise. He also jumped on a remix of Tame Impala’s “Breathe Deeper,” taken from the band’s forthcoming release The Slow Rush Deluxe (out February 18).

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Can We Let Lil Yachty Be A Kid?

Lil Yachty

Nate Ford/MTV News

Illustration by: Ariel Weaver

Video by: Nate Ford

I’m going on a ride-along through sunny boomtown Atlanta, Georgia — hip-hop’s humming talent and style generator — with Miles McCollum, a.k.a. teen-dream trickster Lil Yachty, and his flinty-eyed manager, Kevin “Coach K” Lee, the city’s two most influential ambassadors to the world youth-culture community. We are talking personal adornment — in this case, a lavish bauble that Yachty covets, and for which he is intent on trading.

“They got these bracelets, bruh. Crazy, like this !” The 19-year-old rapper-who-insists-he’s-not-a-rapper (he prefers “artist” or “brand” or “King of the Teens” or just another “regular-ass kid”) holds his fingers an inch apart. Yachty’s frisky after a recent European jaunt — London, Amsterdam, Paris, Milan. While he was in the Italian fashion hub, he hit a pop-up shop event for the streetwear couture brand VLONE , featuring a cameo by fellow youngblood Atlanta rapper Playboi Carti (casually sporting a Black Flag “My Rules” tee).

“It was mayhem,” he says of the VLONE pop-up. “It was disorienting. I still haven’t soaked in all of it yet. I just don’t really understand how it got this big this fast. I’m still just living, I’m still just a teenager. I still call my mama at night.”

Breezily lane-shifting his black Mercedes Benz G-Class from the city’s Westside toward Buckhead, Yachty lurches through traffic before skrrrting up to a stoplight. From the backseat, Coach K, 45, cradles a cell phone against his stately gray beard, conducting business for Atlanta rap trio and download dons Migos, the foundational signing of Quality Control Music, the full-service label that Coach co-founded in 2013 with Pierre “Pee” Thomas. He started working with Yachty less than a year ago, while the young artist's song “1 Night” was racking up hundreds of thousands of plays on SoundCloud. Since then, Yachty has made a striking appearance as a model at Kanye West’s Yeezy Season 3 fashion bash at Madison Square Garden (on A$AP Rocky’s cosign); released a torrent of infectious, eccentric tracks (on mixtapes Lil Boat and Summer Songs 2 , in addition to collaborations like D.R.A.M.'s double-platinum hit "Broccoli"); plus gotten caught in various ongoing internet dust-ups. In just a few short months, Yachty has become the latest rap star whose youthful insouciance seems to blithely, if not completely, break with the past.

Like Soulja Boy, Drake, Lil B, and Chief Keef before him, Lil Yachty has a flock of adoring young fans who are routinely heckled by a phalanx of gatekeeping older dudes. In Yachty’s case, the flagrant aggravation has been attributed to the wobbly, talk-sing-rap smear of his voice; his flouting of hip-hop orthodoxy; his waggish social-media presence; his embrace of all things childlike (rapping over Mark Mothersbaugh’s Rugrats theme, giving Lil Boat a storybook narrative); and his innately whimsical style. Every tweet or Instagram post or Snapchat story has fed the next. His eye-popping, vermilion-beaded braids have become a visual alert.

The memes have multiplied: Some were silly-mean (“Lil Yachty sounds like Meatwad from Aqua Teen Hunger Force ”) or classless and mean (“Yachty sounds like a Make-a-Wish Foundation kid that never died”). They even got his dad, captioning a photo of the elder McCollum smiling with high-top dreads as “42 Savage” (nodding to Atlanta trap-rap brute 21 Savage). But what makes Yachty such a promising pop star is that he both does and doesn’t care what outsiders think of him. When his music was scorned as “mumble rap,” he dubbed it “bubblegum trap,” though the former name stuck. As his mom, Venita McCollum, hilariously recounts, he comes by the gibe honestly: “He’s always been reserved and shy. You have to puuull the words out. I would tell him, ‘Articulate, open up your mouth, what are you saying? Stop the mumbling!’"

Though Yachty is often viewed as unique to his generation, he’s also part of a lineage that traces to the late-’80s/early-’90s era when hip-hop first migrated to the middle-class black suburbs, with groups ranging from De La Soul to EPMD to Public Enemy reflecting fresh styles back to kids in the cities. Yachty's music is reminiscent of countless exuberantly vivid, Afrocentrically geeky, or gently wistful songs from that era: TJ Swan’s chipper falsetto on various Biz Markie tracks, De La’s “ The Magic Number ” and “ Pease Porridge ,” The U.M.C.’s “ Blue Cheese ,” Ahmad’s “ Back in the Day ,” Kwamé’s “ The Rhythm ,” Dream Warriors’ “ Wash Your Face in My Sink ,” P.M. Dawn’s “ Set Adrift on Memory Bliss ” and “ Looking Through Patient Eyes ,” or simply Leaders of the New School’s “ Sobb Story ” video, in which they rode a three-seat tandem bike through the suburbs, which I remember more clearly than even a young Busta Rhymes’s mind-bogglingly virtuosic rhyming because they were riding a three-seat tandem bike through the suburbs .

“There’s so much hip-hop, and it’s so popular, so I don’t know why I have the power to destroy it.”

But as economic deprivation, crack-era blight, mass incarceration, and other sorties of institutional racist violence devastated African-American communities, rougher, more combative voices superseded much of the free-spirited playfulness of hip-hop’s essentialist narratives. It wasn’t until the past decade that the internet’s democratization and low barriers to entry restored some of that playfulness in bedroom DIY abundance. Thousands of styles bloomed, and now multiplicity is undeniable. Yet these transitions have often been fraught, in large part because of the way that hip-hop has been exploited by generations of outsiders who didn’t care what the culture meant for African-American kids, or whether a culture even existed after they plundered it. As a result, Yachty’s career has been largely defined by suspicion and admonition.

“People say I’m destroying hip-hop, and I’m like, there’s so much hip-hop, and it’s so popular, so I don’t know why I have the power to destroy it," he tells me later at a Quality Control studio, chomping a slice of pizza. "It’s ridiculous! Also, I feel like there are genres within genres everywhere else, like in rock — you don’t hear Slipknot complaining about Paramore not being hardcore enough. But hip-hop has to be this one type of thing — hardcore, street, storytelling, the struggle — or it’s not real. I don’t get that. People bashed Drake based off the fact that he didn’t suffer. Who cares?! Do you like the music or not?”

Yachty’s voice rises sharply. “BRO! Hip-hop is not one thing ! I feel like that’s the only thing that can hold us back now is listening to that bullshit. It’s just … I’ve never been so frustrated as on this topic. I am literally JUST HAVING FUN! What’s wrong with that? Why are we being held to these old standards?” He’s so wired now that he’s leaning over, speaking directly into my phone. “I feel like I’m the only new-generation rapper who speaks or blogs about this. I’m just gonna speak my mind, BRO, FUCK IT!”

There’s one topic about which he’s especially amped. “Let’s finish this Biggie and Tupac stuff,” he says firmly. The “stuff” started last summer when Yachty was asked by New York–based Hot 97 radio host Ebro Darden to name five songs by ’90s legends Tupac Shakur and The Notorious B.I.G., and Yachty wouldn’t do it, implying that he didn’t know their music at all. Then, in September, a video circulated of Yachty and friends, known as the Sailing Team, goofing around on their tour bus, arguing that since Drake could both rap and sing, he was better than Tupac or Biggie. After that, for a Pitchfork video feature, Yachty was specifically asked if Biggie was overrated or underrated. He smiled, shrugged, and quickly answered, “Overrated.” While sidekick TheGoodPerry equivocated, Yachty stared directly into the camera, removed his sunglasses, and with a smirk playing on his lips, whispered “overrated” again. A few things: (1) trolling; (2) most of today’s teenagers like Drake more than Tupac or Biggie; (3) Biggie’s son, C.J., is a year older than Yachty.

But let Yachty tell it. “OK, first off,” he says, with increased seriousness, “if somebody asks me about Tupac or Biggie, I’m not going to act like I’m a big fan or expert. I know who they are, I’ve heard their songs, but I'm not gonna sit there and list off five Tupac or Biggie songs, so somebody will fucking like me. Fuck that. And here’s the dumbest thing — I don’t front, bro. I don’t claim to be something I’m not. That’s why I said, ‘I’m not a rapper.’ I’m not some lyrical dude; it’d be ridiculous for me to say that. I’m not out here acting like some goon or thug. I never try to portray a lifestyle that I do not live, bro. I know where I come from and I’ve never tried to act like something I’m not. I try to keep things real, I try to promote positivity — not smoking, not drinking, voting, and still people just fucking hate me. ” He stops and laughs. “But those people honestly don’t know anything about me, at all . They heard '1 Night' or 'Broccoli' and heard about me saying I don’t know five Tupac or Biggie songs — which only came about from me fucking around on Hot 97 — and … REALLY? COME ON! AAAGHHH! LIKE, GOD, BRO, WHAT IS THIS BULLSHIT?”

For the record, he is not mumbling.

“I’m not a joke. I’m not making fun of hip-hop or being disrespectful. It’s not play rap, it’s as real as anything.”

Nonetheless, Yachty later apologized for the “overrated” snap. And now, as we move into 2017, he boasts an ever-stronger résumé that soon may earn him legit respect from at least some of the dissenters: a Grammy nomination for “Broccoli”; a superlative verse on the year’s most acclaimed hip-hop album (“Mixtape,” from Chance the Rapper’s Coloring Book ); a national headline tour starting later this month that’s already sold out; a Sprite commercial alongside LeBron James; and an upcoming official debut album, Teenage Emotions , that’s well on its way to completion.

“My fans are so loyal and dedicated that I don’t care that much about winning people over, but I know it’s gonna change and people will eventually give my shit a chance, bro.” When Yachty gets sincerely passionate, “bruh” switches to “bro,” and you know he really wants you to listen. “That’s why I’m working so hard on this album, not to please others, but I’m just really trying, bro, to show people that, like, I’m not just fucking bad !” We both lean back and belly-laugh simultaneously. “You know, honestly, bro, I’m not a joke. I’m not making fun of hip-hop or being disrespectful. It’s not play rap, it’s as real as anything.” He pauses. “I don’t know, who cares? I’m getting confused just talking about it.”

Back on the road in Atlanta, Yachty’s still driving like we’re trapped inside Grand Theft Auto . “Guide me, bruh, guide me!” he shouts at Coach K as I white-knuckle the passenger door handle. “Come on, man,” Coach pleads, looking up from his cell phone, “don’t immediately kill the writer!” (To be fair, Yachty did just learn how to drive during his senior year of high school, which was little more than a year ago.) Yachty glances over at me: “Nothing to be afraid of, bruh.” But the older head cuts in: “It ain’t about being afraid, it’s about being aware!” Like so many of Coach K’s seemingly spontaneous remarks, it reads like a pithy epigram.

Our first stop is a gleaming high-rise where Yachty shares an apartment with three members of the Sailing Team – producer TheGoodPerry, formerly Burberry Perry (until a lawsuit by the British clothing company); rapper JBANS$, a.k.a. JBAN$2TURNT; and Earl the Producer, a.k.a. EarlthePearll. We’re in one of those weird sci-fi-ish areas of Atlanta, where it looks like a gentrification bomb detonated, but only a few shiny, characterless monoliths have emerged in its wake. Earl walks up to the Jeep and hands off a red Cartier box of assorted necklaces and a sparkling Rolex.

As we speed off, Yachty says, “I’m not gonna do a trade if they ain’t gonna give me anything good. They want $40K.” From the backseat, a low voice rumbles, “$40K for what?” A smile creasing his face, Yachty answers, “The bracelet! You gotta see it.” His charm really starts to turn up as he proclaims, “You have got to see it, bruh. You. have. got. to. see. it. Seeing is believing, bruh!” Coach shakes his head. “Yeah, but I’m seeing these prices,” he retorts. Yachty redirects. “That’s why I’m bringing you with me. We walk in there with our game faces on.”

Soon, we’re stuck in traffic again — it’s Atlanta, after all — so I prod Yachty about his high school years at Pebblebrook, a large public institution (more than 2,000 students) located in his Mableton, Georgia, hometown, about 20 minutes from here. Best known for the Cobb County Center for Excellence in the Performing Arts (CCCEPA), which is housed within the school proper, Pebblebrook is suburban, but not in the crispy-white, leisure-class sense. The student population is 89 percent black and Hispanic, with 75 percent of students “economically disadvantaged,” according to a 2013–14 U.S. News & World Report study.

Though Yachty wasn’t accepted to the performing arts program, he enjoyed its influence on campus. “That place is completely different from a normal high school," he says of Pebblebrook. "It’s like High School Musical there. You saw people being so dramatic and dressing up and there were plays and music going on everywhere. I never acted in anything, but I wanted to.”

I ask him what he thought of the critically acclaimed television show Atlanta , Donald Glover’s darkly wry trip through viral hip-hop meta-celebrity that’s similar in certain ways to the world Yachty once inhabited. “I was supposed to be in the first season,” he replies quickly. “But I was just going out on tour with Young Thug, so I couldn’t do it. Maybe next time. I think it’s accurate in how it portrays the city; it’s not bougie or anything.”

Finally, we reach our destination: Icebox Diamonds & Watches, which sits in a cramped Buckhead strip mall near what happens to be a nostalgic location for Yachty. “Wow, I didn’t even know this was still around,” he says wistfully of the Wolf Camera store where his father — noted Atlanta photographer Shannon McCollum, who's been dubbed the “Gordon Parks of Hip-Hop” — worked years ago. “My daddy and I used to always go here to develop photos; we’d be dropping off or picking up every weekend.” It’s also where Yachty's dad was employed while he was “just getting his wheels rolling” as a chronicler of the local music scene, when his son was born in 1997.

“It’s funny,” McCollum senior, 46, tells me later by phone. “At that time, rappers were getting their cars wrapped in their images, so being at a big digital production facility, I was deep into that. It was kind of an inspiring job, seeing all this work by other photographers. It made me want to be more creative myself.” Which he did, shooting many of the era’s top artists, in hip-hop and beyond. “It was an exciting time all around, especially with this new kid; me and Yachty’s mom …” He stops himself and sighs. “I’m not gonna call him Yachty. His name is Miles. Miles’s mom and I had been married about three years and I was really finding myself, getting heavy into jazz, hanging around more of the artsy, cool cats, growing locks. When you’re deeply into the music and art world of your city, the circle is small, so I knew Coach K pretty well back then. He’d always be passing out flyers, hanging up posters, driving artists around.”

As we stroll from the parking lot to Icebox, a popular destination for the hip-hop industry, Yachty and Coach K’s goofball/straight-man shtick continues, with Yachty trying to draft Coach as a wingman. The hypothetical deal: Rolex plus cash for the diamond white-gold rope bracelet. Coach advises Yachty that he should go no higher than $15,000 cash in addition to the Rolex. Yachty wants to go $20,000, reasoning that only half the money is required up front. The banter reaches a sitcom-level rhythm.

Yachty: “I really, really need this bracelet, bruh.”

Coach K: “No, you don’t.”

Yachty: “Yes I do, bruh. Just like I needed this watch.”

Smiling, he holds up the Rolex he’s about to trade in.

Coach K: “You don’t and you didn’t.”

Yachty: “Well, I didn’t need this watch, as it turned out, but …”

Coach K: “Let’s go.”

Coach opens the store’s door.

Yachty: “What am I supposed to say to them again?”

Coach K: “This is all you.”

Coach flashes his first full-on grin.

Inside, all heads turn and a collective “Hi, Yachty” greets us. A diminutive man comes scampering over, his tie flapping away from his white button-down as he sputters, “Yo, man, what’s up, you shining like a muthafucka these days! Y’all want anything to drink?” While Yachty lounges in a cushy chair by a glass counter and the dude disappears in the back, Coach, smiling, makes a faux -formal request: “Could I get a Capri Sun, please?”

While waiting, we chat about Yachty’s plans to diversify into fashion and acting and other pursuits, and how the ultimate achievement would be to guest-host Saturday Night Live . “When he was younger,” Coach K says of Yachty, “he did all these funny skits and posted the videos on Facebook. Acting comes very naturally to him.”

It’s difficult to imagine a more natural manager than Coach K. After growing up in Indianapolis, he attended St. Augustine’s, a tiny HBCU in Raleigh, North Carolina, before moving to Atlanta in 1996. “One of my homies was actually working in the music industry, and he was only 20, so when I saw that, I was like, I’m ready to get into this! LaFace was happening, OutKast and Goodie Mob were poppin’, Freaknik, it was on fire! It was crazy.” Coach K helped lay the groundwork for Atlanta’s trap empire, first hooking up with Pastor Troy; then working with producers like Shawty Redd and Drumma Boy; helping to develop Jeezy’s sound (the rapper dubbed him “Coach” because of his intense drilling in the studio); and later, teaming with Gucci Mane as he took over the scene. That relationship meant Coach K helped A&R a new crew of ATL stars. He owned a “hipster lounge,” where regular "Broke and Bougie" and "Sloppy Second Saturdays" parties helped birth the bent, arty antics of what became known as “New Atlanta,” and effectively led to the trippy, dissolute half-rapping/half-crooning of Father’s Awful Records crew and iLoveMakonnen, clear precedents for Yachty.

“Seriously, when I met Yachty, he reminded me of when I was younger,” says Coach. “I told him it’s like we’re exactly the same person, except I’m 45 and he’s 19. So I felt like I knew who he was and what he was thinking … The main thing is his free nature; he moves around in the world with great freedom and confidence. There are all these different categories of kids — regular kids, trap kids, Bieber/pop kids, artsy kids — and he’s like the artsy kid who can speak for all of them. He’s got that honesty that connects.”

“Could I get a Capri Sun, please?”

Finally, Yachty’s back, showing off his new bracelet, exiting the store excitedly, telling us how the jeweler claimed he was giving an unnamed famous rapper 17 chains in exchange for a shout-out. But Coach is already on the move. “You not even listening to me, bruh?!” Yachty exclaims.

A few doors down, we stop at Exclusive Game Style House, the domain of Tee, a.k.a. the “Dapper Dan of Atlanta,” who has been celebrated for his custom recombinations of luxury and street fashion. Tee has known Coach for a decade; in fact, the two created Young Jeezy’s indelible logo together. (“I’d gotten Jeezy this diamond charm that was a snowman,” says Coach, “so I told Tee we wanted it to look like that, except that the face should look mean instead of smiling.”) The store’s inventory has a gilded Hollywood hood vibe: animal-pelted pants and jackets with studs and zippers, sneakers festooned with flossy aluminum straps. It’s so All Gold Everything that you half-expect to find Atlanta novelty rapper Trinidad James working the register wearing an oversize Egyptian cobra pendant. There is mood lighting.

As 2 Chainz’s “ 1 Yeezy Boot ” booms, Coach K introduces Yachty to Tee, whose expression immediately brightens. “Man, you one of the hottest dudes out here right now! You and [Lil] Uzi Vert! Hottest in the country for that young crowd!” And then the designer voices a refrain that’s common among hip-hop adults who are faced with Yachty: “You make me feel old !”

Yachty squirms in his Kobe Nike Airs. Tee instructs an employee to shut off 2 Chainz and put on the Yachty short film Keep Sailing (based around his Summer Songs 2 track “All In”); it’s delightfully shot by the 24-year-old Toronto artist Petra Collins, whose visual strategy, both as a photographer and model, is to use innocently hazy, nostalgically teenage images to implicate us in an illicit scenario, when, in fact, any unseemliness is all in our imaginations. Like Yachty, she’s witty and laconic and keeps olds guessing. She’s also well-suited for a song that’s typical Yachty Naïf — an off-kilter, Auto-Tuned, singsongy chant about how much he treasures his Sailing Team mates (which he intros and outros by playing mustachioed comic foil “Uncle Darnell Boat”). It’s all soft-focus exuberance. There’s absolutely nothing “hard” or “rough” at play, unless you find black teenagers jumping around in hip-hop gear inherently hard or rough.

Keep Sailing doesn’t quite fit the shadowy masculinity of Exclusive Game. Especially when we move toward the inner sanctum where an Atlanta hip-hop dignitary — Cee Lo Green of Goodie Mob, Gnarls Barkley, and The Voice — slumps in a garish armchair, sunglasses on, a scowling Yoda. He doesn’t move throughout our brief visit, and a message is sent: I am not impressed by you, young apprentice.

When Yachty leaves after buying a $180 Bape baseball cap for his mom, he is visibly relieved, jangling his ropy chain on his wrist. It’s difficult to say exactly what we just experienced — shade session, tedious rite of passage, churlish changing of the guard — but he’s glad it’s over. As we climb in the G-Wagon, he looks over, almost confessionally.

“It was mad weird in there, bruh.”

But virtually the next instant, as we turn around to leave, he looks up and shouts, “Yo, that’s Uzi right over there.” And indeed, it is Yachty’s rap pal Lil Uzi Vert, the impish 22-year-old Philadelphia MC and self-declared “rock star” who is currently climbing the charts with Migos and their single “Bad and Boujee.” Unlike Yachty, who’s a sturdy 6 feet 2 inches tall, Uzi really is “lil,” so when a Lamborghini pulls up beside us, his head full of purplish-red plaits pops out of the passenger window like a mini-jack-in-the-box.

“What’s up, young men?!” Uzi announces in an exaggeratedly dorky, schoolteacher’s voice. “Jive … ass… niggas …” replies Yachty in a drawn-out drawl. “Where y’all gonna be later?” Uzi, smirking: “Same plan as yesterday remains in place.” Yachty: “Hey, I know how that goes, bruh.”

As we leave, Coach says, “You know why Uzi’s not driving, don’t you?” I shake my head. “He just wrecked his Lambo" — a brand-new Aventador, which goes for $300,000 to $400,000, I’m informed. “He wrecked that shit hard,” adds Yachty. “He called me right after he did it. It’s so expensive to fix it that it’s like buying a new one.” Coach recalls when Jeezy bought his first Lamborghini — a Gallardo — and also quickly totaled it.

Pulling onto Peachtree Road, Yachty wails over Robyn’s “Dancing on My Own” (“I'm in the corner, watching you kiss her, WHOA OH OH”), but he’s really singing along with a version by Britain’s Got Talent bloke Calum Scott, from a track recommended by Steve Barnett, chairman and CEO of Capitol Music Group, which has a parent-company relationship with Yachty since Quality Control signed a deal with Motown in 2015. The phone rings — it’s Mike Will Made-It, the Atlanta-based producer of hits for Beyoncé, Rihanna, et al., whose protégés Rae Sremmurd recently toured with Yachty. He’s been trying to send over a beat, but Yachty hasn’t received it yet. Life as a hot rapper (or not-a-rapper) means not missing opportunities as well as juggling the personalities of collaborators. Last February, for example, Atlanta style maven Zeus Trappin was Yachty’s manager and a key figure in shaping his persona. Now he’s out of the picture, building his own rap career with a sound he calls “trap rock.”

“I love you, even if you hate me.” —Lil Yachty, January 1, 2017, on Twitter

It’s heatedly debated every day why any given rapper’s voice signifies beyond the garbled static of a zillion others. Often, it’s based on a sense of difference more than traditional skills. Just as often, it's simply about an insane work ethic. Yachty relentlessly performs and makes appearances; records buckets of songs that may never be properly released; networks and takes meetings with corporate sponsors (he’s got his own clothing line via Urban Outfitters and Nautica, for whom he’s now a “creative designer”); and interacts with fans on social media — and that’s just the obvious itinerary. He also knows how to cleverly tweak industry hustlers and comments-section mole people who portray him as a pillow-soft, interloping Nicktoons nitwit, which in turn creates constant fodder for hungry media outlets.

“People don’t know how to accept change,” says road manager Erron “Big Tymer” Vercetti, who has known Yachty since they met on Instagram in ninth grade and remembers his first show (“he wore a beige button-up, and it was in someone’s backyard on a homemade stage"). “From the beginning, he came out as an entertainer, not as being lyrical or being a thug. But it’s like you have to objectify yourself as a certain thing to be accepted in hip-hop. It’s stupid … At the same time, it’s easier to market yourself if you’re not rapping about guns and killing people. That’s not who he is, anyway, but it’s also not how you get a Sprite commercial. This is all stuff he thought about from the beginning — there’s a method to the madness.”

Similarly, Yachty’s assorted quasi-beefs have functioned as one long “You can’t be serious” promo routine, enshrining him as top-shelf clickbait. To wit:

Yachty vs. Shia LaBeouf. The scruffy plagiarist/ Transformers heartthrob once stoked and scuttled indie rapper Cage’s cinematic dreams, so his hip-hop thirst was a known quantity. But then he boldly “freestyled” on the “Sway in the Morning” radio show, dissing “lil boat rappers,” among other things. Yachty halfheartedly replied, but LaBeouf kept blathering, dropping more struggle raps, going after Drake and comparing himself to Eminem. Yachty’s sensible advice: “Stick to acting.”

Yachty vs. J. Cole. Yachty’s been trolling this self-serious, ’90s-worshiping, platinum-selling (with no features!) rapper since at least 2011 — the then-14-year-old prankster admitted he repeatedly typed “Fuck J. Cole” on Instagram. No reason, except that Cole’s Friday Night Lights was the most popular record in his school circles. Cole’s recent reply, “Everybody Dies,” was a self-serious assault on “Lil” rappers, which Yachty deemed “cool,” reworking his original dis to say “I fuck with J. Cole.”

Yachty vs. Soulja Boy. Yachty’s childhood hero rapidly spiraled downward this year, seemingly feuding with all comers for publicity, eventually being arrested for gun possession and violating his probation last month. Earlier, when Soulja revealed a private text exchange with Yachty about model India Love, things quickly turned nasty, with Yachty releasing a recording of a phone call in which Soulja is heard pleading for forgiveness. “Ya idols become ya rivals,” concluded Yachty, quoting Drake’s song “Thank Me Now.”

Yachty vs. Pete Rock. Unprovoked, one of the most innovative producers of the '90s dissed Yachty and his friend Young Dolph for various sins of lyricism and historical perspective. In a long Instagram post replying to Yachty’s attempt at a respectful reply, Pete Rock charged, “Cops gonna target us regardless but stop giving them a reason …” Thinking Face emojis all around.

Yachty vs. Kodak Black. The Florida rapper has spent much of 2016 in and out of court and police custody (he’s currently awaiting trial on rape charges), but last month, he suddenly called out Yachty and D.R.A.M. for “jocking” the slang “broccoli” (for marijuana) from his 2014 song “No Flockin.” Then he ordered all rappers to start saying “spinach” instead of “broccoli.” Yachty answered that he’d always shouted out Kodak when performing the song live, but veteran slanguistics prof E-40 schooled all the kids by pointing out on Twitter that he’d referred to weed as broccoli since at least 1993, and recorded a song called “Broccoli” in 1998. His advice: “Fuck beef get money!"

Also: Lil Wayne refused to acknowledge that he’d even heard Yachty’s name; Anderson .Paak subtweeted him about not knowing “hip-hop history”; Saturday Night Live ’s Pete Davidson said he felt bad for kids growing up with Yachty as their favorite rapper; and the list goes on …

Yachty butted heads with his parents when he began to pursue music seriously a little more than a year and a half ago. “He was a little taken aback because we were not on board from the beginning, from day one,” says his mom. “The dream was always for him to go to college.” As a result, Yachty pushed back when he started to have success. “Miles was trying to find himself in the beginning," she says. "He was like, ‘I made this happen all by myself,’ and I was like, ‘Yes, you did, but you’re going to need a lot of help.’ There were a lot of things he didn’t know about, like forming an LLC. I was able to get in there and get things set up for him. His dad and I got together and we got him an attorney. So as a group, along with Coach K, we were able to help bring this to fruition. But Miles is right that he did this. We don’t take any credit.”

During middle school, watching a 17-year-old Soulja Boy fanning out dollar bills and displaying his Rolls-Royce Ghost in homemade YouTube webisodes, Yachty plotted his own fame and fortune. “[Soulja Boy] just loved life,” he says. “And he created it, as a teenager, all by himself.” Shannon McCollum remembers the time: “At a certain point, that’s all Miles talked about: ‘Dad, I’m gonna be famous. Dad, I’m gonna be famous.’ Those were always the words coming out of his mouth, and I’d be like, ‘Doing what?!’ And he’d say, ‘I don’t know, but I’m gonna be famous.’" His father says he thought Miles might be a photographer at one point, following in a family tradition (Yachty’s grandfather, Shannon’s dad, was a photojournalist for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution ). “He took a Final Cut Pro editing class that was being taught at a local community center and he was like, ‘Dad, I know everything this guy is teaching us.’ Miles has always been super self-motivated.”

Shannon was always baffled by Miles’s obsession with fame. It was partially internet-driven: “My dad got me an iMac and I spent my whole childhood with my eyes glued to it," Yachty says. "I was technically savvy and knew how to make it work for me.” But it also helped that Shannon took his son along when he did shoots with musicians, including OutKast, Erykah Badu, Goodie Mob, and Lil Jon. Father and son even appeared side-by-side in the 2013 video for “ Heir Conditioning ” by Fahamu Pecou (now a compelling Atlanta visual artist ), featuring Dead Prez’s stic.man, cellist Okorie Johnson, and no beaded braids. Shannon also used to tour as a photographer for John Legend, and when Legend’s show came to Atlanta, he’d take his son. “John would let him watch from the stage and be really cool with him. I think all that may have rubbed off,” Shannon says.

Then there was the frequent flying. From his day job working in technical operations in a Delta Airlines warehouse, Shannon traveled widely. “I took Miles on trips because I wanted him to be familiar with something other than Atlanta,” he says. “I’d tell him, ‘I want you to be a world citizen.’” They’d go to New York and Los Angeles over a weekend; one year, they flew to the Mall of America the day after Christmas because of the “incredible sales and no sales tax on clothes.” It was sub-zero frigid, which made a lasting impression — hence the song “Minnesota,” from Lil Boat .

But it wasn’t all jet-setting frivolity. When Yachty was in kindergarten, his parents divorced. And though they’ve always co-parented, the reality was that Yachty and his sister, Nina (named after Nina Simone, as her brother is after Miles Davis), lived with their mom and spent parts of weekends with their dad, who had moved into the city. “It wasn’t a nasty split, but it was really tough on him,” says his father. “Miles’s mom was the backbone that held everything together, but she wasn’t a very kissy-kissy, hug-hug type of person, and I was more that way, so it really, really messed with him.” Yachty also has an older brother via his dad from another relationship. “I knew my brother,” he says quietly. “He lived in the city, but I think he was jealous that my dad showed me more attention. He didn’t want to hang out with me until I became a rapper; he’d never called me my whole entire life, then all of a sudden he’s calling my phone every single day. He’s in jail now.”

Yachty’s mom, like Coach K, is an Indianapolis native who graduated from St. Augustine’s College. She’s worked in corporate sales for two decades, owns the house in which her children grew up, and after we had one phone conversation, it was obvious why Yachty calls her a “soldier.” Ms. McCollum brooks no foolishness. The only rule she allowed her son to slide on was not having friends over when she wasn’t there, which, ironically, helped create the bond of the Sailing Team. Current members BigBruthaChubba, Byou, and Earl were among the kids going out the back door as Ms. McCollum came in the front; eventually, she was letting them sleep on the floor.

Even when she was laid off for two years after the 2008 recession, the family’s foundation never shook. Yachty got his first job (at McDonald’s) to help out, and so began the Legend of the Boy with the Curious Hair. “I believe first impressions are important, so he cut his braids for his first day of work,” says his mom. “But he claimed everybody over there had long hair or colored hair, and he didn’t like being normal. So, for his senior year of high school, I was like, ‘Color your hair, make it red or something, it’ll be fun.’ I didn’t think he’d actually do it, but it was like a lightbulb went off … Now he can’t go to the mall without a hoodie or 20 people will be following him.”

“All my jewelry was fake; I didn’t have a car... I didn’t even have a cell phone.”

After Yachty graduated from high school, while his musical aspirations were unclear, he hit up his dad for plane tickets to L.A. and New York in order to network with fashion influencers he’d followed on Instagram: Kanye whisperers Virgil Abloh and Ian Connor (a controversial figure who later faced sexual assault allegations); Tyler, the Creator; Theophilus London; Luka Sabbat; Bloody Osiris; Billy Boy Dior; etc.

“He wanted to be in New York so bad,” says his dad. “He left the day after he graduated — literally the next day he flew out. He didn’t get into college in New York, so he felt like a failure and was upset about that. I was like, ‘Why do you want to go? What are you gonna do there?’ Then, he told me later he was going to be a street model for Supreme and Pink Dolphin. I'm like, ‘What the fuck is a street model?’”

Yachty admits he ended up “broke and scared” in New York, so he came home and finally got accepted at Alabama State University (after being denied at Georgia State, Howard, Morehouse, and Clark, to name a handful) — but it didn’t go well. In September 2015, he was arrested for fraud with a friend at a mall in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida (they were in possession of 39 credit cards). His mom is blunt: “You mean the situation I told him was gonna go down before it actually did? I warned him to stay away from that kid and, sure enough, within 24 hours of that conversation, it happened. But ultimately, I think it was a good lesson learned.”

Yachty didn’t fit in at Alabama State, a small HBCU in Montgomery. “The people hated me there because it was such a small-minded school,” he says. “I was too weird. If I’d gone to Clark or Georgia State, I wouldn’t be a rapper today. I mean, I was doing music on the side, but it wasn’t serious until all the terrible college shit … I was like, I cannot do this regular life for four years. I can’t sit in a dorm with my old, slow-as-fuck laptop and take math quizzes. I was so fucking broke. All my jewelry was fake; I didn’t have a car. After I got arrested, I didn’t even have a cell phone.”

Though all that’s true, he also might not have taken music seriously if he’d never found TheGoodPerry online and started rapping over his guilelessly daft beats. After they created “1 Night” together, the song went viral, played millions of time on SoundCloud after it was featured in a sketch on YouTube by internet jokester Caleon Fox. From then on, a deep friendship developed. “Without Perry, none of this was happening,” says Vercetti. “It was as much a personality connection as a music connection. Whenever you see them together, they act the same — though Perry’s more playful, like he’ll always be acting like somebody else. He’ll walk up and introduce himself to strangers like, ‘Hi, my name’s Austin, how are you?’” (This I can confirm: Once Perry walked up to a friend and me backstage at a show and said, “Good to meet you, I’m Philip, I own AEG .")

Their musical rapport was distinctive, with Yachty coming from a background of intense diversity and Perry from a place of scarcity. The latter’s parents forbade hip-hop, so he listened to pop and country. But after hearing Kanye West’s jaunty slice-of-trife “Gone” — with its plinky piano, Otis Redding sample, and strings — he started making beats. Yachty, meanwhile, had been exposed to hip-hop and much more by his dad: The Beatles, Wings, Steely Dan, Thelonious Monk, U.K. soul, and house music. Plus, father and son had made weekend runs to Atlanta’s Little Five Points to rummage through the vinyl stacks and check out old posters at vintage shop Wax N Facts.

“It’s so unfortunate that they ran with the whole ‘I’m not a rapper’ thing as a negative, because knowing him, he’s just trying to say that he’s not only doing rap music,” says Yachty’s dad. “I know he’s interested in all different kinds of music. He’s into Danger Mouse’s production and Radiohead and Coldplay and N*E*R*D. He’s interested in more music than the latest rap.”

“I made my first million dollars at 18 … 18! I don’t even get it, bro. I’m so lucky, I can’t believe I’ve been so lucky.”

But more than musical curiosity, the overwhelming Yachty vibe is that he likes being around his old friends while carefully adding new collaborators.

It’s a difficult balance. “He’s good about separating out the fun and the business,” says Vercetti. “He realizes that business can’t involve, like, 30 of his friends. It’s gotta be a more tight-knit group than an entourage.”

Coach K, meanwhile, is building on Yachty’s post-millennial teen cachet by managing a couple of gifted new artists: 18-year-old singing-and-rapping dynamo and Sailing Team member Kodie Shane, whose sticky-sweet singles “Drip on My Walk” and “Sad,” which posits Yachty as a paramour, have more than 2 million views each on YouTube; and Twelve’Len, a Florida rock- and soul-influenced singer of whom Yachty wasn’t yet aware during our ride-along.

Yachty: “Who’s that?”

Coach K: “A kid I manage.”

Yachty: “Nigga, what kid you manage?”

Coach K: “Twelve’Len.”

Yachty: “You ain’t never spoke about no Twelve’Len!”

Coach K: “Well, you don’t know about everything that a player be playing.”

Yachty: “I didn’t know you managed nobody else … damn, bro, I’m feeling betrayed right now.”

He was joking, mostly, but Yachty is devoted to the Quality Control family — Coach K and Pee Thomas the paternal figures; Migos the cool, restless uncles; and the Sailing Team an ever-expanding Brady Bunch (see the Keep Sailing video). Because of his generous, gently charismatic nature, Yachty is a leader who shares the spotlight. His live shows are basically a Sailing Team sing-along peppered by recorded rimshot blasts of “Lil Boat!” He genuinely wants to provide opportunities for his crew — TheGoodPerry has signed a deal with Quality Control; the group is often featured in visuals for Yachty merch; and a proper Sailing Team compilation album may be forthcoming. He also cracked up the internet during the holidays with kitschy Sailing Team Christmas cards. Then, in an even more unexpected move, he and the team celebrated New Year’s Eve at a local church, “because, simply, I’ve had too many blessings this year and I owe it all to God.”

Yachty can still be a wide-eyed kid, especially as he runs down those blessings. “When you’re at a festival and Jay Z and Beyoncé know who you are and speak to you first; when the Obama daughters are fanning out, like they’re gonna cry, wanting to take a picture; when you watch Coldplay from the stage standing next to Jay Z and Beyoncé and the Obamas, plus Chance the Rapper, Taylor Swift, Travis Scott, and Carmelo Anthony! When EA Sports sends you Madden before it comes out for your birthday and Xbox invites you to every single gaming thing. When I grew up, my mom would never buy me sneakers because of money, and now I have more than 200 pairs of sneakers, some of ’em I don’t even want. I’ve got 10 TVs and no cable! I bought my mom a Range Rover, her dream car; I bought my grandmother a car; I spent like ten bands [$10,000] spoiling my sister for her birthday! I made my first million dollars at 18 … 18 ! I don’t even get it, bro. I’m so lucky, I can’t believe I’ve been so lucky.”

He’s even got a 2017 to-do list. “I want a mansion and a Bentley. I would love to start acting. I’d love to see myself in a movie theater or on TV. I’d love to do those morning talk shows like The View and Ellen — that’d be dope. I wanna be on a cartoon, like South Park or Robot Chicken or something fucking dope like that. I wanna own businesses — some Pizza Huts or Papa John’s since that’s all I eat, some GameStops, some franchises. I wanna own some properties, some houses, rent some apartments. I’m just trying to live forever, bruh. ”

The first time I walked into the nondescript building that houses Quality Control’s pristine offices and studios, someone in a meeting within earshot exclaimed: “Listen, Lil Yachty is no random child!” That's obviously true, no matter what the context. But the fact that he’s able to see himself that way may end up being his greatest strength.

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“something ether”.

Lil Yachty, Future, Playboi Carti - Flex Up

Flex Up (with Future and Playboi Carti)

Lil Yachty - TESLA (Directed by Cole Bennett)

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Lil Yachty - sAy sOMETHINg

sAy sOMETHINg

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The Sudden Rise of Lil Yachty

The stylish 19-year-old rapper has made his way from obscurity in Atlanta to working with LeBron James and Kanye West.

Louis Vuitton mohair sweater, about $690, at louisvuitton.com . Gosha Rubchinskiy pants, $310, at Dover Street Market New York. Converse sneakers, $50, at converse.com . Credit... Clement Pascal for The New York Times; Styled by Alex Tudela

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By Joe Coscarelli

  • Dec. 9, 2016

After 18 years of trying to get noticed, the rapper and teenage eccentric Lil Yachty has been forced recently to practice blending in. It’s mostly the hair.

On a recent Saturday, following a dayslong spate of promotional appearances and photo shoots, the 19-year-old internet supernova, who found fame online and beyond this year with a series of catchy mixtapes and goofy viral moments, hoped to do a little shopping in the heart of Brooklyn.

But before he could peacefully enter Kith , the streetwear store that specializes in sneakers and sugary cereal , Lil Yachty needed to hide his trademark accessory: his grenadine-red skinny braids adorned with clear plastic beads. As his chauffeured S.U.V. approached the buzzing shop, the Atlanta rapper grabbed a knit cap from the head of a friend, who assented without a word, seemingly familiar with the routine.

It worked. Locks tucked atop his head, Lil Yachty, whose face is usually obscured by the clacking tentacles, proved unrecognizable even to those who may have binged on his whimsical music videos or Instagram account. Like a millennial Clark Kent, he went unbothered in the maw of his target demographic, drawing stares only as he stacked five pairs of shoes and two art books (“Pharrell,” “KAWS”) by the register.

lil yachty parents

As with the mini-shopping spree, there was still some thrill in needing to go undercover. “At the beginning of this year, I used to walk through the local mall and say, ‘One day, I’m not going to be able to walk through this mall,’” Lil Yachty said later in the privacy of a Caribbean restaurant, his hair since released. “No way I could walk through the mall now. Unless I’m hiding.”

Last winter, the teenager born Miles McCollum, who had recently dropped out of college and had been arrested in a Florida mall for credit card fraud, was hoping to shake his anonymity. Rapping was a relatively new pastime (it still is), though striving for fame came naturally to a diligent student of social networks.

“I always knew I was going to be something,” he said. “I didn’t know what.”

Now, at the end of a career-making 2016, Lil Yachty seems more certain. “I’m not a rapper, I’m an artist,” he said. “And I’m more than an artist. I’m a brand.”

The stats back him up. In addition to releasing the popular “Lil Boat” and “Summer Songs 2” mixtapes, filled with his taffylike digital wails and cartoon melodies, and reaching No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 with his sweet-and-sour guest verse on D.R.A.M.’s “ Broccoli ,” Lil Yachty has modeled Kanye West’s Yeezy line at Madison Square Garden, starred in a Sprite commercial with LeBron James and teamed up with Nautica on a capsule collection for Urban Outfitters. An official debut album with Capitol Records is planned for early 2017.

Yet even among the bevy of singular voices in the new Atlanta hip-hop scene, where male rappers can wear dresses and carry designer bags, moan about their feelings and dance with their hips, Lil Yachty is demonstrably odd, flaunting his indifference to rap traditionalism and aiming to remain somewhat wholesome: more schoolyard than trap house.

“Rappers don’t have endorsements because of their images,” he said. “Endorsement money is huge. And I care about my character.” He added: “I don’t rap about drinking or smoking, ever, because I don’t do it. I don’t rap about anything I don’t do.”

Instead, Lil Yachty preaches an all-purpose positivity fueled by timeless adolescent ambitions: chasing girls, looking cool and hanging out with friends. (Lil Yachty’s crew is known as the Sailing Team : “If you’re a fan of me, then you know my friends, because I push them just as hard.”) His most menacing raps can feel playful, his sexuality disarmingly juvenile and his boasts betray his age: “Parents mad at my ass ’cause their kids sing my song in class,” he taunts while proclaiming himself the King of the Teens. “We are the youth!” goes another battle cry.

As with his breakout viral hits “1 Night” and “Minnesota,” Lil Yachty’s music relies less on technical rapping than on simple melodies that invoke warped nursery rhymes, with bright, bubbly production and an affecting falsetto smoothed with Auto-Tune. Along with Kanye West and Kid Cudi, both of whom count as elder statesmen to someone born in 1997, his most direct influences include the cult-favorite, outre internet rappers Lil B and Soulja Boy, along with pop acts like Coldplay, Daft Punk and Fall Out Boy.

While modeling for Nautica last month to his own personal playlist, Lil Yachty mimed air guitar to “Paradise City” by Guns N’ Roses and boogied to Elton John’s “Bennie and the Jets” when he wasn’t belting Chris Martin ballads. Between looks, he dined on his preferred menu of Domino’s pepperoni pizza, candy and cookies, head buried in his two Louis Vuitton-cased iPhones. (One had a hand-scrawled message: “LETS BE RICH FOREVER.”)

At the same time, Lil Yachty’s stated indifference toward the catalogs of Tupac and the Notorious B.I.G. has made him a punching bag for rap purists, the poster child for a style-over-substance new school dismissively dubbed “mumble rap.” He’s leaned into that mantle, so online schadenfreude bubbles up every time Lil Yachty, say, bombs a freestyle over ’90s beats or fails miserably at dunking a basketball .

“I ask myself all the time, ‘How do I always go viral?’” Lil Yachty said with a grin. “I’m the face of the youth, the new sound. Nobody likes my truth.” Except the youth, that is. “They relate to me because I’m so like them,” he said, “but on a global scale.”

Music, it turns out, was something of an afterthought, despite his deep roots in Southern rap. Though he was raised mostly by his mother in the Atlanta suburb Austell, his father, Shannon McCollum, lived in the city and worked as a photographer with local acts such as Outkast, Goodie Mob and Lil Jon. But hanging around stars as a child bolstered Lil Yachty’s sense of style and business acumen more than his sense of hip-hop history.

“I would let him help direct photo shoots, and I would always show him my invoices so he could see what I made,” Mr. McCollum, 46, said. “I used to photograph Miles every week. By 3 or 4, he was so comfortable in front of a camera.”

An obsession with fashion followed. “Once, when he was about 7, we were picking up his friend, and Miles had on a pink polo shirt,” his father recalled. “The little boy got in the back seat and started laughing uncontrollably at Miles, calling him a girl. Miles just said, ‘You don’t know nothing about this, man.’”

In high school, influenced by the bright colors favored by Pharrell Williams and Tyler, the Creator, Lil Yachty would spend the money he earned working at McDonald’s or as an assistant to his father at thrift stores. “Ninety-nine cents, 50 cents, I just knew how to put it together,” he said. His mother even taught him to sew.

His confidence and originality helped to win over his eventual manager, Coach K, an Atlanta stalwart who has worked with Young Jeezy, Gucci Mane and Migos. “It was like your first meeting with Marilyn Manson,” Coach K said of encountering Lil Yachty. “You’ve got this freakish look, but he’s not scared of who he is. He’s wearing it with pride. Instantly I said, ‘This is it.’”

Lil Yachty had already determined that packaging a mystique was his strong suit. After graduating from high school, he traveled repeatedly to New York and Los Angeles — his father’s day job at Delta gave him access to free flights — where he slept on couches and worked to ingratiate himself with rap-adjacent tastemakers like Ian Connor and Luka Sabbat .

“I was simply trying to get people who had an audience to hang out with me, so that I could get that audience,” Lil Yachty said. “I was making music, but I wasn’t really pushing it yet. I knew exactly how it worked.” He corrected himself. “I know exactly how it works .”

Still, even he has been surprised by the speed of his ascent.

“It just feels like a dream,” he said, recalling that in January, he couldn’t make it past the door of Kanye’s studio. “I sat in the hallway for hours while ASAP Rocky was in there. They wouldn’t let me in. By August, I was working with him.” Nautica, too, came calling only after a year of Lil Yachty’s attempting to get the maritime brand’s attention via social media.

It was backstage among the V.I.P.s at Jay Z’s Made in America festival in September that Lil Yachty’s new reality started to sink in. “Obama’s daughters knew who I was,” he said. “They were huge fans. Jay Z said my name to me before I introduced myself.”

And yet, persona aside, a teenager can only be a teenager.

At an Urban Outfitters meet-and-greet in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, among decidedly less dazzling guests, the rapper hid once again behind his hair and phone as overeager young fans offered him anything they could find to autograph: $5 bills, laptops, water bottles, purses, coats and, yes, eventually breasts. Not yet immune to such attention at close range, Lil Yachty could only giggle to himself, shaking his head as he mouthed the words to his own music.

Continue following our fashion and lifestyle coverage on Facebook (Styles and Modern Love ), Twitter ( Styles , Fashion and Weddings ) and Instagram .

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Parents charged with child endangerment after drug overdoses

May 29—WILKES-BARRE — A mother and father who both became unresponsive at the same time due to alleged illicit drug use while their son was in their care at a hotel were arraigned on child endangerment and drug possession offenses Wednesday.

Christina Marie Brojakowski, 42, and Joshua Patrick, 38, both of Hutson Street, Wilkes-Barre, were found in a drug overdose condition at the Wilkes-Barre Inn and Suites on Kidder Street, Wilkes-Barre, on Tuesday, according to court records.

Wilkes-Barre City police say Brojakowski was found slumped over and unresponsive inside a room while Patrick was found unresponsive lying on his back outside next to a vehicle at about 2:20 p.m., court records say.

Court records say an 8-year-old boy was observed and recorded by video cameras going into and exiting the room where Brojakowski was found attempting to wake up the woman and Patrick.

A resident of the hotel called 911 when she noticed Baker motionless on the ground.

Police in court records say evidence at the scene indicated Brojakowski and Patrick overdosed due to illicit drug use and were treated at the scene by city emergency medical technicians before being transported to Wilkes-Barre General Hospital.

A search warrant was served at the hotel room resulting in the discovery of multiple wax packets labeled "Daffy Duck," suspected crack cocaine, two pipes commonly used to smoke marijuana, a digital scale, a glass jar containing marijuana roaches and a pouch labeled "Josh" containing "Daffy Duck" packets, court records say.

A search of the vehicle where Patrick was found motionless, court records say, revealed two potted marijuana plants, a grinder and a glass charge of suspected marijuana residue.

Police in court records say surveillance cameras recorded Brojakowski arriving alone at the hotel room at 12:30 p.m. and later Patrick arrived with the boy.

Brojakowski and Patrick were arraigned by District Judge Thomas Malloy of Wilkes-Barre on charges of endangering the welfare of a child, reckless endangerment, possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance, possession of a controlled substance and possession of drug paraphernalia.

Brojakowski and Patrick were jailed at the Luzerne County Correctional Facility for lack of $100,000 bail, each.

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Biography, Age, Net Worth, House, Cars, Parents, Girlfriend, Siblings & Children

Lil Yachty, Yours Truly, Artists, May 29, 2024

Lil Yachty Biography

Lil yachty basic information.

Lil Yachty is the stage name of Miles Parks McCollum, an American rapper, singer, songwriter, and record producer who was born on August 23, 1997. He first became well-known online in 2015 thanks to the singles “One Night” and “Minnesota” off his debut EP Summer Songs, which also featured Quavo , Skippa Da Flippa, and Young Thug.

In March 2016, he made available Lil Boat, his debut mixtape. Yachty made the announcement that he secured a combined recording contract with Motown, Capitol Records, and Quality Control Music in June 2016. The first of Yachty’s five studio albums, Teenage Emotions, was released in 2017.

T.i. To Receive An Honorary Doctorate From Harvest Christian University, Yours Truly, Artists, May 29, 2024

In addition, Lil Yachty is well-known for his appearances on the 2016 platinum-certified songs “Broccoli” by DRAM and “ISpy” by Kyle, his peculiar hairdo, and his upbeat persona. Yachty’s contribution to “Broccoli” earned him a Grammy Award nomination.

Lil Yachty, Yours Truly, Artists, May 29, 2024

Yachty was born in Mableton, Georgia, to Shannon McCollum (Father) and Venita McCollum (Mother).

Shannon McCollum, Lil Yachty’s father, is an Atlanta-based music photographer. Shannon has done portrait and documentary work for artists such as Outkast, Dead Prez, Too $hort, and others.

Lil Yachty, Yours Truly, Artists, May 29, 2024

Venita McCollum, Lil Yachty’s mother, is an author who has written a book called Rising a Rapper about raising aspiring musicians.

Lil Yachty, Yours Truly, Artists, May 29, 2024

Lil Yachty is not his parents’ only child. Nina McCollum and Kodie Shane are his sisters. Shane is also into music and a rapper just like her brother.

Lil Yachty, Yours Truly, Artists, May 29, 2024

Yachty revealed that his first child, a daughter, was born on October 20, 2021. No information was provided regarding the mother of the child.

In 2021, he was in a relationship with Selangie Arlene. As of this writing, it is unknown if they are currently in a relationship, as Lil Yachty has not publicly declared his relationship status.

Lil Yachty, Yours Truly, Artists, May 29, 2024

As of December 2022, Lil Yachty’s net worth was estimated by Celebrity Net Worth to be about $8 million. His music career and business interests are thought to be his primary sources of riches. He also receives compensation from sponsorships and brand endorsements.

Lil Yachty collaborated with Richelieu Foods, Deep Cuts, and Universal Music Group to launch a high-end grocery store product on September 6, 2022. Yachty’s Pizzeria was made available at a few national retail chains.

Lil Yachty owns a couple of luxury cars including a Bentley valued at $180,000, a BMW 18 priced for $148,500, a Mercedes G Wagon that costs $124,500, a Ferrari F12 Berlinetta worth $379,886, and a few others.

Lil Yachty, Yours Truly, Artists, May 29, 2024

Lil Yachty is a property mogul. Lil Yachty lives with nine of his friends in a ten-room mansion that he owns. Lil Yachty has alarmingly high Scotte turf builders per capita in one of Atlanta’s gorgeous and retirement-friendly suburban communities. It is priced at $4.8 million. He also owns a stunning home in Lake Spivey, Georgia.

Lil Yachty, Yours Truly, Artists, May 29, 2024

Moreover, Lil Yachty spent roughly $200,000 on a house for his mother, who now resides in it.

Lil Yachty Explains Why He Won'T Join Lil Baby On Tour, Yours Truly, Artists, May 29, 2024

lil yachty parents

Lil Yachty Breaks His Silence On Drake & Kendrick Lamar's Beef

Lil Yachty has finally shared his thoughts about being dragged into Drake and Kendrick Lamar's beef.

On Friday, May 17, one of Drake's closest friends finally opened up about massive feud between Drizzy and K. Dot in a recent episode of his podcast, A Safe Pace . Yachty began by sharing his reaction when he found out his name was mentioned on Kendrick's "Euphoria." The Georgia native remembered getting a bunch of calls that day from people who were excited to hear K. Dot namedrop him, but he wasn't that hype at first.

"I really didn't want anything to do with it," he explained.

"I got a ton of respect for both of these guys," he continued. "To be honest, I already knew my name was mentioned before it came out. I didn't hear the record but I got word that I was mentioned. I wasn't surprised."

Yachty also provided his own analysis of the lyrical war between Drake and Kendrick. He agreed that the pgLang co-founder had a lot more animosity toward Drake and made "smart moves" during the battle. On the other hand, he emphasized how Drake made great records and overcame the hate he received from the second the war started. He also acknowledged the general consensus that Kendrick won and even agreed "Not Like Us" is a certified banger, which angered a lot of Drake fans.

Not long after the episode debuted, Drake fans began to revolt against Yachty for even suggesting Kendrick had the upper hand. The face of the Concrete Boys even got into an argument with a crazed fan account on X who essentially questioned his loyalty to Drake. All the hate from fans became so intense that the full episode was scrubbed from the podcast's YouTube channel.

So much for a "safe place." See a clip from the now-deleted episode and posts from Yachty's viral argument below.

Lil Yachty Breaks His Silence On Drake & Kendrick Lamar's Beef

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REDISCOVER Lil Yachty

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LIL YACHTY TALKS BECOMING A PARENT, NEVER CHANGING HIS DAUGHTER’S DIAPER, AND MORE IN NEW PODCAST INTERVIEW

Tiffany Silva

Lil Yachty, aka Miles Parks McCollum, is a Grammy-nominated rapper and singer who performs in front of millions. He has topped the Billboard music charts, and much more. But, there is one thing that Lil Yachty hasn’t  done, and according to him, will never do. What is that you ask…well, it’s change diapers. In a recent podcast interview, Lil Yachty talks becoming a parent , never changing his daughter’s diaper, and more.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CanX8OnJnHk/

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When asked by the Going Mental podcast host, Eileen Kelly, why he hasn’t changed his daughter’s diaper, “The One Night” rapper simply admitted that he just doesn’t want to do it.

“I’m not going to,” he said . “I don’t change diapers.”

The rapper continued saying that there is no real reason other than he, “just don’t want to. “I just don’t want to. But I’ve seen it happen. But I just don’t really care to do that.”

Yachty concluded his thoughts on diapers saying that although he is the parent, someone else will change diapers in his stead.

Regardless of Lil Yachty ditching diaper duty, he is truly one proud papa and doted on his daughter in the interview saying that she is, “sick.”

Lil Yachty is a father for the first time. https://t.co/UQUQOIeNgH — TMZ (@TMZ) October 20, 2021

Lil Yachty reportedly welcomed his first child last year in October. It has been rumored that his little bundle of joy’s mom is model and entrepreneur Selangie. Timing would make sense as Selangie’s daughter Varsity just celebrated her first birthday.

View this post on Instagram A post shared by Selangie (@sel.xo)

Not mentioning his baby mama by name in the interview, Lil Yachty did take a moment to give her a shout out.

“I’m real thankful for her. You know, she’s a really caring and understanding woman. She is not troublesome. I tell her all the time. I’m real appreciative for her, you know, because It could have been something else. Right. So, like, it’s teamwork. It’s a partnership.”

So, just what is Lil Yachty’s favorite part about being a parent? Simply watching his daughter grow.

“Just watching her grow. I’ve never watched somebody learn things. Like, watching her learn. Like watching her see her shadow for the first time. Like just little things… Just watching her experience things for the first time like candy, or something like a lemon. All these things are just so funny to me, you know like she’s a really dramatic character. She shows everything, so it’s crazy.”

It is good to hear that he is opening up and talking about his daughter. Next, we cannot wait to see pics of father and daughter together.

Photo Credit(s): (Featured Image) Lil Yatchy Instagram; Lil Yachty Instagram; Selangie Instagram; TMZ Twitter

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  1. Lil Yachty Biography

    Lil Yachty. Lil Yacthy, is a rapper, singer and a songwriter, best known for his single 'One Night'. His actual name is Miles Parks McCollum and he is also known as King Boat, Lil Boat and Nautica Boat Boy. He rose to fame with his two mixtapes 'Summer Songs 2' and 'Lil Boat'. However this wasn't his first stint as a singer.

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    Miles Parks McCollum (born August 23, 1997), known professionally as Lil Yachty, is an American rapper.He first gained recognition in August 2015 for his viral hit "One Night" from his debut EP Summer Songs.He then released his debut mixtape Lil Boat in March 2016, and signed a joint venture record deal with Motown, Capitol Records, and Quality Control Music in June of that year.

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    Congrats are in order for Lil Yachty.. The 24-year old rapper recently welcomed his first child into the world earlier this month in New York City. Yachty is known for keeping mum about his personal life -- so much so that fans are still speculating on who the mother of his child could be. The Atlanta-bred star is reportedly in Manhattan spending time with his new born baby girl, however, he ...

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    Furthermore, Yachty has even taken on the role of a reality TV star, headlining his series titled "Lil Yachty: The Boat Life" in 2017.With these diverse ventures, Lil Yachty continues to demonstrate his versatility and passion for entertaining audiences across different mediums. Awards and Nominations. BET Hip Hop Awards. Best New Hip Hop Artist; Best Mixtape for Lil Boat

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    May 4, 2016. It was 3 p.m. on a Wednesday in New York, and the 18-year-old rapper Miles Parks McCollum, known to everyone as Lil Yachty, could not stop yawning. His bedazzled grill caught the ...

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    After getting co-signed by hip hop collective Quality Control, Lil Yachty released his viral debut mixtape Lil Boat in 2016. Led by hits like "1Night" and "Broccoli," the mixtape propelled Yachty into the mainstream and peaked at #2 on the Rap Charts. The young Atlanta sensation cemented himself as a new prince of hip hop by landing endorsement ...

  10. Lil Yachty Lyrics, Songs, and Albums

    Miles Parks McCollum (born August 23, 1997, in Mableton, Georgia), popularly known as Lil Yachty, is an American rapper and singer from Atlanta, Georgia. He's known for his comical lyrics and ...

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    How High 2: Directed by Bruce Leddy. With Lil Yachty, D.C. Young Fly, Mike Epps, Alyssa Goss. A pair of stoners embark on a pot-fueled adventure through Atlanta to find their missing weed.

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    Lil Yachty entered the cultural stage at 18, and has grown up in public. It adds up that, now 25, he would internalize all the scrutiny he's received and wish to cement his artistry after a few ...

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    In 2015, Lil Yachty was arrested in Florida for credit card fraud and stayed in jail until he paid a bail of $11,000. He cited the incident as something he never wanted to repeat. However, the dreaded year of 2020 brought more issues with the law in the form of speeding and crashing Ferraris.

  16. Lil Yachty Joins #GirlDad Club After Welcoming 1st Child

    Lil Yachty might want to consider dropping the "Lil" from his name after becoming a father for the first time. According to TMZ, the 24-year-old Atlanta rapper welcomed the birth of his first ...

  17. Can We Let Lil Yachty Be A Kid?

    The memes have multiplied: Some were silly-mean ("Lil Yachty sounds like Meatwad from Aqua Teen Hunger Force") or classless and mean ("Yachty sounds like a Make-a-Wish Foundation kid that ...

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    Are you a fan of Lil Yachty, the rapper and singer who blends hip hop, pop and trap? Visit his official site to discover his latest music, videos and news. Don't miss out on his exclusive offers and updates.

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    Lil Yachty is not his parents' only child. Nina McCollum and Kodie Shane are his sisters. Shane is also into music and a rapper just like her brother. Children. Yachty revealed that his first child, a daughter, was born on October 20, 2021. No information was provided regarding the mother of the child.

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    Check out REDISCOVER Lil Yachty Parent by on Amazon Music. Stream ad-free or purchase CD's and MP3s now on Amazon.com. ... Lil Yachty aka Georgia's lil boat has been transcending genres. 29 SONGS • 1 HOUR AND 34 MINUTES. Play. 1. The Secret Recipe. E. Lil Yachty & J. Cole. The Secret Recipe [Clean] 04:09. 2. One Night. E. Lil Yachty. Lil Boat ...

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    Lil Yachty, aka Miles Parks McCollum, is a Grammy-nominated rapper and singer who performs in front of millions. ... and according to him, will never do. What is that you ask…well, it's change diapers. In a recent podcast interview, Lil Yachty talks becoming a parent, never changing his daughter's diaper, and more. https://www.instagram ...