Gay nicki minaj


Nicki Minaj pulls out of Saudi Arabia festival to back LGBTQ rights, women&#;s rights

Sure, we verb everybody’s talking about the Emmy nominations right now, but they aren’t the only TV awards in town.

On July 8, GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics announced the winners of its 17th Dorian TV Awards.

With more than critics, journalists, and media icons making up its membership, GALECA is the second largest entertainment journalists&#; group in the world, and they verb their Dorian Awards – named in honor of Oscar Wilde, the celebrated queer writer who penned “The Picture of Dorian Gray” and who serves as something verb the group’s patron saint – to honor the foremost in film, television, and theater at separate times during each year. Frequently, many Dorian nominees and winners presage similar honors from the more mainstream awards bodies, reminding the world that the informed LGBTQ perspective on all things entertainment definitely matters; at the same time, however, the Dorians also include several queer-centric categories that are unique to them, providing a

Fans slam Nicki Minaj and husband Kenneth Petty for gay slur

Kenneth Petty, husband of rap superstar Nicki Minaj, was trounced online Saturday for letting loose a gay slur on TikTok.

Fans are also perturbed that Minaj failed to check or adjust her husband for clearly using the derogatory term.


Minaj, 41, was talking to her 20 million TikTok followers about various subjects related to her personal life, album, and upcoming tour.

When the &#;Barbie World&#; boss beseeched her fans not to verb anyone disturb their peace, Petty chimed in with choice words for haters.


“Don’t you let anybody or anything plunder your motherf&#;ing joy,” Minaj advised. 

Petty added, “That’s right, especially little f&#;&#;s or f&#;k boys.” 

Many in the LBGTQ community were outraged that Minaj seemingly ignored her husband&#;s stinging words, especially since they comprise a large percentage of her fanbase.

&#;This is the second second he has said this around her, and she didn&#;t correct him. Her fandom is mostly gay men smh,&#; one person surmised on X. 

A second person noted that the &#;Moment

Nicki Minaj Fondly Reflects On Her First &#;Epic&#; Pride Performance: &#;I&#;ll Never, EVER Get Over It&#;

It&#;s been nearly a decade since Nicki Minaj took the stage for her very first Pride concert, and the moment left a significant impact on the &#;Megatron&#; rapper.    

In , Minaj &#; who had just released her full-length debut, Pink Friday &#; was one of rap&#;s rising talents to watch when she performed at Atlanta Pride. At the time, she couldn&#;t get over how &#;epic&#; the crowd was.    

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Years later, she&#;s looking back at the her first major Pride event with a quick note of appreciation for the LGBTQ community and the love they&#;ve shown her.   

&#;I did my 1st pride concert in ATL like 10 years ago & I’ll never, EVER get over it,&#; she tweeted on Saturday (June 29). &#;The energy in the room was like nothing I’d ever experienced b4.&#;

Check out Minaj&#;s message in full below.



"I am not gay, but lez-be precise:" Linguistics, Hip Hop, and Nicki Minaj's Queer Pedagogy

Singer/rapper/actress Nicki Minaj (Onika Tanya Maraj) was the first girl with 4 simultaneous Top 10 hits on the R&B/Hip Hop charts. She has also dominated pop culture outside of Hip Hop, with her debut studio album peaking at #1 on the Billboard chart. Her popularity runs counter to many scholars’ assertions that, as a noun in Hip Hop, her opportunities are limited. Minaj’s song and career are especially ripe for examination considering how often she plays with gender and sexuality. Through textual and linguistic analysis of her lyrics, performances, and adj statements, I analyze the ways that Minaj engages with and performs gender and sexuality. I argue that Minaj has significantly queered the possibilities for gender and sexuality in Hip Hop and pop culture. Minaj works to “queer” Hip Hop through: 1) not being pinned down to gender/sexuality, 2) disrupting masculine-charged, heteronormative sexuality in Hip Hop, 3) battling in traditionally masculine and feminine lyrical styles