Megan Thee Stallion
SeFi II--
Demographics
Gender Female
Birth Name Megan Jovon Ruth Pete
Birthplace Bexar, Texas, U.S.
Birth Date February 15, 1995
Ethnicity West African
Overview African-American, Louisiana Creole [African, likely French]
Nationality American
Career Rapper, singer, actress, songwriter
Color Season Dark Autumn
Notes and Motifs
Gamma sensualist
Se-Lead rapper
Also known as Meg Thee Stallion, Tina Snow, Hot Girl Meg, Hot Girl Coach, and Suga
SeFi II-- Unseelie
SeFi II--
SeFi II-- Unseelie
SeFi II-- Unseelie
Stallion: “I’m always trying to one-up myself.”
Stallion: “I don’t really feel like I done made it all the way. I feel like, ‘OK, we did this. Then we grinded enough to get to this point. Now we gotta grind enough to get bigger and bigger,’ you know?”
Stallion: “I want to show other girls how happy I am and how confident I am, how I still want to go to school and I still want to rap.”
Stallion: “I don’t feel like I’m in competition with anybody. If I’m worried about beating somebody else, I’m not going to be the best version of myself. It shouldn’t be a competition because somebody else winning is not going to make me lose.”
Stallion: “I’m not a fake person.”
Stallion: “We gotta break these double-standards and get women to loosen up a bit. We gotta show them that we can do what we want to do how we want to do it. If someone doesn’t like it, they can get to stepping.”
Stallion: “Being a rapper and still trying to pursue an education is really overwhelming sometimes.”
Stallion: “Houston is a place where you have to be the best. Everybody gotta be flashy, flashy. It’s not like a gaudy thing, but people definitely put on their best dressed even if they go into Wal-Mart.”
Stallion: “When I was little, I wanted to be a plastic surgeon.”
Stallion: “I hate that people have made the term SoundCloud rapper into a bad thing, because a lot of artists are underground and they don’t have a way to put their music on. But to get that clout, to get that popularity, you might want to upload your music to SoundCloud – because how else is everybody going to hear it?”
Stallion: “There were so many different labels coming to me and they just didn’t seem right, but 300… they wanted me bad. It felt like a family.”
Stallion: “Honestly, I’m not going to lie. I was a good kid.”
Stallion: “Girls, we have to go 10 times harder than guys. We are still expected to give you the bars, give you the look, give you the routine. This is me – I wanna be a rapper, this is it.”
Stallion: “Lie one more time and ima quit sparing you.”
Stallion: “I feel like boys listen to my music. They just don’t like to admit it, but I go hard. But yeah, I feel like I go really hard, so why not listen to me? Anybody could relate to my music, honestly.”
Stallion: “I didn’t tell anybody that I wanted to rap when I was in high school.”
Stallion: “I can’t read your mind, gotta say that sh*t"
Stallion: “My mom is the first female rapper I’ve ever known. I’m thinking, like, ‘Okay, yeah, this is normal. Everybody’s doing this.’”
Stallion: “I definitely feel like people in the South are a little more raw. Our whole swag, the way we talk… When I go to the East Coast, people automatically know I’m not from there.”
Stallion: “My music is me letting the world know how confident I am in myself, and me basically telling other women, and guys, how confident and how comfortable I believe they should be.”
Stallion: “The first time I ever put on a cowboy hat for a video a lot of people on my team was like, ‘Are you sure? You know, we don’t want people we think we country.’ I’m like, ‘It’s cute! I don’t care what people think.’”
Stallion: “When you go to college you can just be whoever you wanna be. So I got there and I’m like, ‘Yeah, I’ma rapper.’”
Stallion: “I just want to be like a good example to somebody in the future.”
Stallion: “I like movies that make you semi fall in love with the villain so you have sympathy for him.”
Stallion: “I don’t feel like my sound is similar to any female artist that’s out right now, so I definitely feel like we just need some Texas flavor.”
Stallion: “I really like how the characters always have to go through some type of long journey that’s like a crazy struggle. And these anime shows give women power. She’s always the queen or somebody that you cannot beat – I love that.”
Stallion: “I’ve been writing since I was maybe seven.”
Stallion: “I was raised by a woman who was her true and authentic self. So I feel like it’s very important to put on for people who aren’t that confident or people who don’t realize the value in self-love.”
Stallion: “They wanna know ‘bout me. They say, 'Tell me your story.' Only thing you need to know is I’m in love with the money.”
Stallion: “Sometimes, when you’re doing too much, things get overwhelming. So I just have to calm myself down and think, ‘What would my mama want me to do?’”
Stallion: “When I drop a freestyle, I’m like, ‘This freestyle gotta go hard’ or when I do something it’s, ‘How can we top this?’”
Stallion: “I feel like I have to put on for my city, because we have so many legends and so many greats.”
Stallion: “I definitely wanna open up some assisted-living facilities around my city.”
Stallion: “Confidence literally starts from yourself. You have to go look in the mirror at yourself. If you don’t like what you see, you’re going to give off that energy.”
Stallion: “That’s what I feel like my music represents, having no limits or restrictions.”
Stallion: “I wanna work with my girl Maliibu Miitch. I love Maliibu. I definitely wanna work with Beyonce, Rihanna. I’m a huge fan of Rihanna and Beyonce, so that’s like my dream collab.”