Lizzo BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.
Lizzo’s latest chapter has been anything but quiet with a string of major headlines over the past few days. The Grammy winner found herself candidly reflecting on what she calls a crumbling music comeback. In several interviews, including a New York magazine cover story, she confessed that her return in 2025 did not land as planned. After a careful, three-year build-up, legal turmoil and rapidly shifting music industry dynamics left her June mixtape My Face Hurts from Smiling and its just-released deluxe edition, My Face Still Hurts from Smiling, as creative highlights rather than chart-topping triumphs. Lizzo admitted the experience was a crash course in today’s pop landscape, remarking that what worked in years past is now obsolete. She openly discussed the ongoing lawsuits—serious allegations from former dancers and a wardrobe assistant ranging from sexual harassment to toxic work environment—which continue in the courts, casting a shadow over her attempts at a fresh start.
That turbulence has shaped her creative vision. Lizzo revealed she might even shelve Love in Real Life, an album long teased but now feeling out of step with her instincts. She said, By 2025, I have changed, the world has changed so much, and so much has happened, so she feels compelled to follow her instincts in new directions.
On the business and social media front, Lizzo made news with a fiery TikTok video blasting the current state of music discovery. She slammed TikTok’s algorithm for throttling new music’s reach, pointing out that even major releases are struggling for traction, and confessed that despite dropping her mixtape’s deluxe edition, many fans had not even heard of it. In response, she launched a private TikTok account for diehard followers, now boasting over 280,000 fans and offering exclusive content and direct fan engagement. Lizzo’s social media presence remains bold and honest, and she continues to deploy it to comment on industry trends, encourage new artists, and throw subtle shade at her peers.
Turning to her personal life, Lizzo has spent recent days shutting down rampant Ozempic rumors tied to her visible weight loss. Through her new single IDGAS and in multiple interviews, including appearances with Kelly Clarkson and Trisha Paytas, she has addressed her wellness journey, admitting she once tried GLP1 weight loss medications but clarifying her recent transformation is due to lifestyle change, not pharmaceuticals. She continues to advocate for body positivity while emphasizing her evolution is personal, not a betrayal of her movement roots.
For Lizzo, the past week has been a high-wire act of public defense, introspection, and candid explanations—a period likely to be remembered as both a turning point and a testament to her ongoing willingness to bare it all, for better or worse.
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