Lizzo looked incredible while wearing a studded leather bra and shredded, black cutoff shorts as she played the flute in her backyard on Thursday.
In the video, shared with her more than 11.3 million Instagram followers, the 33-year-old Grammy winner put on a performance of her new hit Rumors.
‘I hope y’all enjoy this cus I wrote, directed & edited this h** just for YOU. Today’s the day to stream TF out of Rumors— SO STREAM RUMORS FOR A FAT ᴀss AND CLEAR MIND,’ she captioned the impressive footage.
She paired her Sєxy ensemble with a pair of thigh-boots and a matching choker.
Her pals Megan Thee Stallion and Lauren Jauregui both commented ‘YES’ and ‘YES MAAM.’
On Wednesday, Lizzo was overcome with emotion during an appearance on GMA as she revealed how hurtful ‘racist’ and ‘fatphobic’ comments were that she received after releasing her collaborative single Rumors.
The track, which also features Cardi B, earned the performer and rapper a wave of vitriolic comments on social media.
‘I don’t mind critiques about me — my music,’ she said on the morning show. ‘I don’t even mind the fat comments, you know. I just feel like it’s unfair sometimes, the treatment that people like me receive.’
Rumors had been viewed on YouTube nearly 15 million times as of Wednesday morning, but the barrage of insulting comments was too much for Lizzo, who broke down in a tearful Instagram video about the criticism on Monday.
‘It’s like it doesn’t matter how much positive energy you put into the world, you’re going to have people who have something, something mean to say about you,’ she said in her short video. ‘It’s fatphobic, it’s racist and it’s hurtful.’
On GMA, the rapper (born Melissa Jefferson) said she thought it was more important to call out the unacceptable language than to try to stay above the fray.
‘People are like, “Don’t let ‘em see you with your head down,”‘ she recounted. ‘My head is always up. Even when I’m upset and even when I’m crying, my head is up. But I know it’s my job as an artist to reflect at times, and this s*** should not fly. It shouldn’t be OK.’
Lizzo also said it was ‘unfortunate’ how Black women in the entertainment industry ‘suffer from the marginalization the most and the erasure the most.’
‘If it weren’t for the internet, if it weren’t for social media, I could have been erased,’ she mused. ‘But I chose to be undeniable, and I chose to be loud and I chose to be great.
‘And I’m still here. It’s difficult.’