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Method’s daughter, Cheyenne, is a rapper – and a good one too

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Felipe/Getty Images; For Griffin/Getty Images for ESSENCE

While Method Man is talented and beautiful, it’s no surprise that his children are also talented and beautiful. The Wu-Tang MC’s daughter, Cheyenne, follows in his footsteps in music, rapping under the name Chey. The young star is talented and is moving into the highlight. She recently released the song “Hair and nails” and “Boujee and the Ghetto.”

With this decision comes the fact that folks will robotically put pressure on her as a celebrity star. During the visit The Sway Universe recently, co-host Heather B asked Chey how she mentally prepared herself to cope with this way of control.

“It’s definitely mental, like you said. I kind of reached out to my dad because he’s been in this industry for so long. And you know, not everyone is always going to have the nicest thing to say,” she said. “There will probably be one one who finds the most effective thing and one one who finds the worst thing. So what he taught me was to remain above all of it. I do know the reality, I do know my heart, I do know what I’m saying. I comprehend it’s not a negative thing because that is just not who I’m as a person. So if someone says so, go ahead and do what you might have to do. And if someone believes you, do what you might have to do. Because I do know who I’m, my fans know who I’m and my family knows who I’m. That’s all that basically matters to me.”

Both parents fully support her developing musical profession. Mom Tamika Smith is her manager (or “mom”). Method Man, born Clifford Smith, was one of the primary people to listen to her music. To show real support, he invited her to perform on the Bud Drop 4/20 concert in New York on April 19, introducing her as “my baby.”

“This is my baby, baby,” he said on stage. “You know we prefer our daughters – we love our sons too! Something about a daddy’s girl.

But even along with his support, Chey told Sway and company. that she never tried to ride her father’s mantle. A school graduate will make a name for herself because she is determined and on her own terms. She shared what she at all times did.

“My first job was at Wendy’s. I loved working at Wendy’s. “I was 16 years old and I thought, ‘I’ll get my $7.50 and it will light up,'” she said. “When I started working there or any job, people asked, ‘Why do you work?’ What’s the point of you being here? Your dad is a great artist. And it’s like, what do you want me to do? You said my dad was an artist. I still need money. I could get it from him, but at the same time he wants us to work for it. I always work for what I want.”

This article was originally published on : www.essence.com

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