Lil Wayne decided to open up for his nearly 35 million Twitter followers about his desire to settle down and share where he’s at in his love life.
Picture courtesy of Getty Images and Johnny Nunez/WireImage
The F in Weezy F. Baby stands for “find a wife.”
Lil Wayne made the decision to reveal his desire to settle down and his current romantic status with his over 35 million Twitter followers.
Weezy wrote on Sunday, “I need a wife man I’m getting too wealthy.” “Stfu.”
Although it’s unknown who Wayne wants to stop talking, as well as what made him decide he needed to settle down, this isn’t the first time he’s brought up marriage. When Wayne declared on Twitter in April of last year that he was the “happiest man alive” and included the phrase “the Carters” with it, everyone assumed he had recently tied the knot. Two months later, after Nicki Minaj confessed she had mistakenly congratulated him, he went on an Instagram Live with her and clarified that, indeed, he was single in April of last year.
“I was wondering, ‘Oh, what’s going on?'” after seeing some tweets the other day. And I wrote you a text saying, “Well, congratulations.” You seem to be in a nice mood, I can tell. And I believed you were married, so I responded, ‘Congratulations,'” Nicki remarked.
However, Tunechi clarified that he “did not get married” and that the tweet was actually a reference to his children. Wayne spoke the words “the Carters,” and the female responded, “That’s my damn sons, that’s my sons’ little name of their little group.”
Denise Bidot, Weezy’s girlfriend, wished him a happy 39th birthday on Instagram in September, describing him as “the greatest love of my life” while the two stood next to enormous letters that said “W & D.” Since last autumn, Bidot and Lil Wayne have not exchanged any images.
Fans of Wayne are no longer waiting for his 2011 mixtape, Sorry 4 the Wait, to become available on streaming sites, while Wayne is waiting to get married. Four brand-new tracks were included in the reissue: “Cameras,” “Lil Romeo,” “Bleu Snappin,” and “Anti-Hero.”