S&M hitmaker Rihanna proved that it’s not just her hit song lyrics that get a bit raunchy – as she favours a masochistic outlook in the bedroom in real life, too
Rihanna once confessed she isn’t against BDSM in practice as well as in the lyrics of her songs.
The S&M hitmaker “likes to be spanked” and even keeps whips in the drawer downstairs. She told Rolling Stone back in 2011: “I love feeling like I’m somebody’s girl. I like to be spanked. Being tied up is fun. I like to keep it spontaneous. Sometimes whips and chains can be overly planned – you gotta stop, get the whip from the drawer downstairs. I’d rather have him use his hands.”
She added: “Being submissive in the bedroom is really fun. You get to be a little lady, to have somebody be macho and in charge of your sh**. That’s fun to me.”
According to Daily Mail, she added: “In my normal life, I work hard and take a lot of executive decisions every day, so I prefer to feel the intimacy of someone like the girl. That’s 𝑠e𝑥y.”
Going more into detail about her 𝑠e𝑥ual preferences with GQ, Rihanna explained: “I like to feel like a woman,” she says. “I have to be in control in every other aspect of my life, so I feel like in a relationship, like I wanted to be able to take a step back and have somebody else take the lead.
“I could absolutely be dominant. But, in general, I’d rather… How do I say this in like a… non-X-rated version? Love makes you go places you probably wouldn’t ever go, had it not been for love. But I think everybody still has their limits.”
Her racy antics continued in the spotlight in 2019, when Rihanna switched up her position and went to spank model Slick Woods at her New York Fashion Week Fenty show – just before she gave birth. Wrapped up in nothing but black cords, Slick headed down the catwalk nearly naked.
She spanked one of the models at her Fenty show (Image: Getty Images)
She said: “My last memory before going into the hospital is of Rihanna spanking me with a whip. I was already 2cm dilated when I left the show. I closed New York Fashion Week modelling in Rihanna’s Savage x Fenty show in pasties, thigh-highs, stilettos, and not much else.”
But regardless, she says the song S&M isn’t all about 𝑠e𝑥. Opening up to Vogue about the “metaphorical” meaning behind her hit single, she explained: “The song can be taken very literally, but it’s actually a very metaphorical song. It’s about the love-hate relationship with the media and how sometimes the pain is pleasurable. We feed off it – or I do. And it was a very personal message that I was trying to get across.
It comes after Drake appeared to diss Rihanna’s bedroom skills (Image: Getty Images for Gucci)
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“I wanted the video to say that but still play off of the theme of S&M. And I mean, wow, people went crazy. They just saw 𝑠e𝑥. And when I see that video, I don’t see that at all. I wanted it to be cheeky. There’s no other way to take it.”