Lizzo says every major celebrity and rapper slid into her DMs before her weight loss—She just didn’t realize it [VIDEO]
Fame, Flutes, and Oblivious DMs: Why Lizzo’s Podcast Confession Sparked a Frenzy
Lizzo has spent years advocating for body positivity while navigating the upper echelons of music stardom. But in a recent podcast appearance, she dropped a revelation that caught even her most devoted fans off guard. Before she ever lost a pound, every major celebrity and rapper was already sliding into her direct messages. However, she just had no idea they were trying to sleep with her.
The confession came during a candid conversation on the Friends Keep Secrets podcast. There, Lizzo explained that her upbringing as a self-described “invisible” fat girl left her completely oblivious to romantic advances. Even from some of the biggest names in entertainment. The clip was shared by @ItsKingSlime on X. It has since racked up over 1.6 million views across social platforms. Thus, igniting a polarized debate about fame, desire, and whether her claims hold water.
When High School Invisibility Collides With A-List Attention
Lizzo traced her confusion back to her formative years in Houston, where she said being overweight meant being treated as romantically invisible. “Where I grew up, if you were fat, you were ugly—which, that’s not true… but where I grew up, that’s what it was,” she told hosts Benny Blanco, Lil Dicky, and Kristin Batalucco. “No one liked me in high school.”
She recalled a specific incident where a boy passed notes suggesting a secret hookup, an offer she rejected. That early conditioning, she explained, left her ill-equipped to interpret interest from men once fame arrived. When the DMs started flooding in following her 2019 breakthrough album Cuz I Love You, she defaulted to assuming the messages were purely professional.
“I was like, ‘I don’t even know what this person’s intention is,’” Lizzo said. “I thought it was all friendly. People had to tell me, ‘Hey, no. This person is trying to you.’ I was like, ‘What?’ I’m so oblivious.”
The timing of the attention matters: Lizzo specified that the DMs arrived before her roughly 60-pound weight loss journey that began around 2023. Her claim directly challenges assumptions that her mainstream desirability among high-profile men began only after her physical transformation.
A Career Built on Confidence, Now Revisited Through a New Lens
For much of her public career, Lizzo has been positioned as a symbol of unapologetic self-acceptance. Songs like “Truth Hurts” and “Juice” celebrated her body and her confidence at a time when mainstream pop rarely afforded that space to women of her size. Her presence alone challenged industry norms about who could be considered a sex symbol.
That context makes her DM confession particularly striking. If the biggest names in rap and celebrity were pursuing her during the height of her “big girl” era—when she was already a chart-topping artist but before any physical transformation—it suggests a behind-the-scenes reality that contradicts the public narrative about what the industry finds desirable.
What Lizzo described was not a lack of suitors. Instead, it was a failure to recognize them. Her own self-perception was shaped by teenage experiences of rejection. So, it created a blind spot that persisted even after she became one of the most famous women in music. The attention was there. However, she simply could not see it for what it was.
The Art of Misreading Signals in the Age of the DM
Lizzo’s experience taps into a broader cultural conversation about how digital communication blurs the line between professional networking and romantic pursuit. Direct messages, by their very nature, occupy a gray area. A text that begins with admiration for someone’s work can easily cross into flirtation without a clear demarcation.
For public figures, that ambiguity is amplified. High-profile artists receive countless messages daily from collaborators, executives, and fans. Parsing intent becomes its own form of emotional labor. Lizzo’s admission that she required friends to translate these interactions for her underscores how fame can paradoxically leave someone isolated when it comes to reading basic social cues.
Her story also highlights the gendered dynamics at play. Women in entertainment often navigate a landscape where professional interest and romantic interest are intertwined. What Lizzo described—mistaking advances for friendly networking—is a familiar scenario for many women. However, few experience it at the level of A-list rappers and celebrities.
Doubt, Defense, and the DM Divide
Reaction to the clip on social media have been sharply divided. There are users on X staking out opposing positions that reflect deeper cultural attitudes about body size, desirability, and celebrity credibility.
Skeptics were quick to dismiss Lizzo’s account as exaggerated or outright fabricated. “Lizzo claiming she didn’t know A-list rappers were hitting on her is the ultimate level of ‘playing it cool’ or just plain cap,” one X user wrote. Others demanded proof. So, there were comments like “I dare her to show the DMs” appearing frequently. A portion of the criticism veered into body-shaming territory, with one user claiming “obese people are known for mistaking friendly interactions for flirting.”
On the other side, defenders argued that her experience was entirely plausible. “People saying cap like big chicks dont get smashed all the time lol,” one reply read. Others pointed to fame’s role in reshaping attraction dynamics. “Everybody loves a winner, weight loss or not,” another user noted. Therefore, suggesting that success itself is a powerful draw regardless of physical appearance.
A third camp approached the story with humor. Thus, framing Lizzo’s obliviousness as both relatable and comically out of touch. “Lizzo out here getting hey big head DMs from rappers and thinking it’s a collab pitch,” one user joked. “Girl, they weren’t tryna feature on your flute album.”
What Lizzo’s Story Reveals About Perception and Desire
Beyond the debate over whether her claim is true lies a more nuanced observation about how people perceive themselves versus how others perceive them. Lizzo’s admission that she grew up believing her size rendered her unworthy of romantic attention speaks to a painful reality many can relate to. That she carried that belief into superstardom—even as some of the most sought-after men in entertainment pursued her—reveals how deeply early experiences shape adult self-image.
The fact that her friends had to translate romantic intent for her also raises questions about the nature of modern fame. When someone’s daily reality includes messages from the biggest names in the industry, discerning who genuinely wants to connect versus who wants something more becomes an exhausting exercise in guesswork.
What Lizzo described was not a lack of options. However, it was a lack of awareness that she had options at all. For someone who built a career on projecting confidence, the confession adds a layer of vulnerability that complicates her public persona without diminishing it.
Conclusion: When Success Speaks Louder Than Size
Lizzo’s podcast revelation did more than generate viral content. Also, it forced a reconsideration of assumptions about who gets desired in the entertainment industry and why. Whether listeners believe her claim that every major rapper and celebrity slid into her DMs before her weight loss, the underlying truth she articulated is harder to dismiss: the relationship between body size, fame, and attraction is far more complex than public narratives often allow.
Her own inability to recognize the advances speaks to the lasting impact of adolescent rejection and the strange isolation that fame can create. In the end, the most compelling part of her story may not be who messaged her, but the fact that she needed someone else to tell her they were trying.
