Flo Milli Is Only Going Up From Here
New York magazine|August 3 - 16, 2020
The rising rapper from Mobile, Alabama, spins rhymes that sound like schoolyard taunts.
By Hunter Harris
Flo Milli Is Only Going Up From Here

THE RAPPER FLO Milli had given herself a deadline: She was going to be famous by 18. Not rapping by 18— famous by then. “It was like an obsession for me,” Milli, now all of 20 years old, tells me one July afternoon, dressed in full glam in her Atlanta apartment. As a tween, she’d seen Nicki Minaj rapping on BET’s 106 & Park. She’d grown up around music—the women in her family singing in church choirs, her mom playing Jill Scott tracks on the way to school—but Flo (real name Tamia Monique Carter) didn’t trust her own singing voice. She decided to get a pen and paper and be a rapper instead. College was a backup plan she didn’t want to explore: “I was praying to God, like, ‘God, please don’t make me a doctor or anything. I want to be a rapper!’”

She missed her deadline by a year. Her viral song, “Beef-FloMix,” got her signed to RCA Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment. Last month, she released her first mixtape, a 12-song project titled Ho, Why Is You Here? At least three of the tracks are already internet popular: “BeefFloMix,” the raunchy “In the Party,” and “Weak,” which takes a classic lovelorn SWV song and turns it love-annoyed: Instead of singing about a man’s dizzying effect on a woman, Flo Milli raps about being bored of easily manipulated men. “I feel like, as young women, you deal with haters, you deal with insecure men. Sometimes you just have people trying to bring you down. So it’s like, ‘Ho, why is you here?’ ” she says. “Are you contributing to my success, or are you, like, taking from it?”

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