CupcakKe Will Set You Free
Entertainment
“I’m a beautician to pubic hair,” CupcakKe said happily during a Sunday afternoon interview in the Jezebel studio. “If you need your pubic hair styled, come to meeee!”
CupcakKe raps a lot about pubes, a fact of life that most artists tend to avoid in verse. CupcakKe, however, is not most artists, and avoidance isn’t really her thing. Coupled with her considerable talent, that directness is a big part of the Chicago-based rapper’s rapidly ascending appeal. Since the release of viral hits “Vagina” and “Deepthroat” in 2015, she has plowed across whatever invisible lines remain in the public sexual imagination with dazzlingly weird lyrics (“Nut in my pussy hair, that’s deep conditioner”; “Fuck me ‘til my pussy redder than Hot Cheetos”) and music videos that often involve joyfully donned pasties and, to provide one example, barking while giving a blow job to a dog bone.
(This week, YouTube removed her videos for “Deepthroat” and “Duck Duck Goose” for “violating YouTube’s policy on nudity or sexual content.” The videos were restored after an uproar, and YouTube acknowledged making “the wrong call.”)
“I have never been the not-confident person,” she says. “You could put me in like, a hotel sheet, and I’m gonna go onstage in that hotel sheet and make it look like a fucking million dollar dress.” That said, the day of the interview she had on quite the ensemble: a zipped-up off-the-shoulder leather jacket, giant hoops, and long yellow nails. Her hair, leggings and sunglasses were an impressively coordinated pinkish-red.
“This is like, the bummiest you will ever see me,” she declared, to the envy of myself and deputy editor Julianne Escobedo Shepherd, both in sweatshirts and greasy buns. “This is my airport style.”
CupcakKe is the onstage persona of Elizabeth Harris, a 20-year-old recovering Pepsi and 7-Up addict (“I’m three weeks clean”) who is close with her mother, likes “older guys”—which she clarified to mean “26, maybe 27, if we’re really pushing it”—and, when she talks about her life as Elizabeth, sometimes speaks so softly that you have to lean forward. (Marilyn Monhoe, Harris’s other persona, lives exclusively on Twitter.) Growing up in Chicago, Harris spent years in homeless shelters, and her music has been influenced by what she called “the lifestyle of struggle.”