
Lizzo thinks about her return to music and her personal transformation, as she opens the challenges she faced in recent years.
In a cover story with New York On September 8, the 37 -year -old admitted that the re -introduction of the music industry after multiple lawsuits and personal conflicts did not go the way she imagined.
“I have put these two individuals, and it seems that I have a crash in what appears to be a pop artist in 2025, which is interesting,” she said.
“Industry and landscapes change every year. What has succeeded last year will not work this year.”
When she released her album 2022 privateLizzo felt confident in moving in the world of music and “gate guards from radio to marketing to media. But with its mixed tape June My face hurts me from smilingThe singer admitted that she felt not ready despite the planning years.
“I fly on a mystery seat. This is crazy because I had three years to plan this S-and all my plans of collapse.”
“I think I need to drop these songs so that I can sabotage this expectation from me, because in turn this new discovery that I really wanted. I wanted people to re -discover who I am and loved them again.”
Her return has been revealed as she continues to fight legal battles.
In August 2023, three dancers of reserve copies, Crystal Williams, Ariana Davis and Nouel Rodriguez filed lawsuits accusing her of sexual harassment, racial harassment and creating an enemy work environment.
Lizzo denied the allegations of the Instagram post, where she wrote: “I am not here to see it as a victim, but I also know that I am not the villain who was filmed by the media for me as these past few days.
I am very open to my sexual life and express myself, but I cannot accept or allow people to use this openness to make me something I am not. “
After weeks, a separate lawsuit was filed by Asha Daniels, a former treasury assistant, who claimed that her team strengthened a “racist and sexual” work environment.
Lizzo sought to reject both cases, with some already proposed, while other allegations are still in court.
Besides her legal battle, Lizo was explicit about her mental health, body image and physical transformation.
In a recent interview with Women’s healthShe described the body’s positive as “the radical action represented in the audacity to exist loudly and proudly in a society that told you that it should not be present.”
The singer, whose real name is Melissa Vivian Jefferson, explained that weight loss was never to meet expectations.
“I love how to look now. I still think I am big. I still wear excessive clothes. I have the same menus. I got the same abdomen, the same thighs. I think I am just a smaller version.”
She also rejected the idea that she provided it should be associated with weight loss or surgery.
“If you do all this on OzemPIC, if you do all this with surgery, I will be proud of myself, because this *** is difficult. Everyone who has a larger body in this current version of society knows that this is not easy. It is not easy.”