Lil Uzi Vert‘s new forehead and tongue tattoos have fueled controversy around the rapper being a “Satanist.” The Philly native was recently spotted showing off their new ink, including an upside down cross on their tongue and a tribal design on their forehead where their $24 million pink diamond once was. Fans took to Twitter on Sunday (April 9) to react to Uzi’s new ink, with some claiming they’ll no longer listen to their music due to them being a “Satanist” and on “devil shit.” “I can’t listen to Lil Uzi’s music no more he on some weirdo shit,” one person wrote. “I am God’s warrior, I will beat him up if he on some devil or anti God energy. This is disturbing.” Others tweeted: “Lil Uzi Vert = Lu Ci Fer. He’s a devout Satanist,” along with: “It’s getting corny now uzi, we get it u love satan.” Another fan added: “deez rappers sold their soulds. for quick fame. Lil Uzi is possesed lol. will be blocking most rap music in my life from now on. except 50 cent.” Lil Uzi Vert’s fresh ink comes after they were criticized for rapping about Satan on an unreleased song they debuted at Rolling Loud California last month. “I make a City Girl believe in Satan,” Uzi said on the song, referring to their girlfriend, JT. According to Baby Pluto, though, the line was a simply a metaphor and shouldn’t be taken literally. “Basically, I make a girl do whatever I say so,” they told TMZ when asked about the controversial lyric. Uzi also revealed that JT “didn’t think much of it” and she was even in the studio when they recorded the song. Lil Uzi Vert is currently working on their long-awaited new album The Pink Tape. Don Cannon revealed in February that 680 songs had been recorded for the project over the past 18 months.

Taylor Swift is encouraging rising artists to stay away from reading social media comments too closely.

During a conversation with The New York Times about songwriting, the “Shake It Off” singer explained that although criticism can sometimes become a “creative writing prompt,” constantly checking comments online can leave artists overwhelmed by negativity.

“My favourite thing when I sit down with new artists or songwriters, I'm like, ‘Why are you reading your comments?’ Like, that's too much of it,” she said. “You're inundating yourself with too much criticism that doesn't really have a focus. But a little bit of it, you've got to just be like, this is part of (the job). Like, don't make this make you stop writing or make you edit yourself or whatever.”

Swift, 36, also shared that she often tells other musicians to channel criticism into music instead of firing back at people online or posting long responses in the Notes app.

“If it's an interesting point to you to kind of respond to, then that's a gift for you to be able to write something. Maybe you wouldn't have written something that day,” she continued. “But don't go to the Notes app and post it, like write (a song) about it. Make art about this. Don't respond to trolls in your comments. That's not what we want from you. We want your art.”

The global superstar went on to say that criticism has inspired some of the biggest songs throughout her career. She pointed to her 2014 hit “Blank Space,” saying it likely would not have happened without people constantly focusing on her dating life and creating “slideshow” style narratives about her relationships.

Speaking about her 2022 track “Anti-Hero,” Swift added, “That song doesn't exist if I don't get criticised for every aspect of my personality that people have a problem with or whatever.”

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