NBA Youngboy Apologizes for Outburst on Future & Blueface During IG Live with Offset

NBA YoungBoy joined Offset on Instagram Live to own up to flashing out on Future and Blueface, admitting he let some “pussy ass shit” pull him out of his body before apologizing directly to Offset and the two artists he had targeted.

The roughly 86-second exchange happened in the early hours of July 10, 2026, and quickly spread through screen recordings that captured YoungBoy in a red cap with his hand near his mouth as he spoke candidly. He told Offset he had been doing great until the emotional reaction set him back, then thanked his fellow rapper for checking him. “I really let some other pussy ass shit hurt me, and that’s what really got me back on this bitch, going up, tripping,” YoungBoy said. “I apologize to you, and I apologize to them too, it’s all good.”

The prior outburst that prompted the apology centered on comments YoungBoy made involving Blueface’s mother Karlissa after she spoke on his name and education level, plus references to Blueface’s partner Nevaeh and a tattoo tied to YoungBoy. He also took shots at Future’s upcoming project. Those remarks drew quick pushback online, with heads noting how fast personal matters can spill into public exchanges in the culture. Offset stepped in during the live to hold YoungBoy accountable, and the Baton Rouge rapper responded by owning the moment instead of doubling down.

YoungBoy emphasized the need to move differently going forward. “No, no, no, on some G shit, on some G shit, I gotta stop that getting emotional shit,” he said. “We ain’t doing that no more, we getting to it, we happy around this motherfucker, you know what I mean? Real shit, real shit, we ain’t letting no nigga get up out our body.” The conversation stayed in the familiar language of the streets, with Offset responding in kind by calling YoungBoy “bitch” in the affectionate, brotherly way common among solid niggas who check each other.

The two also touched on location, with YoungBoy confirming Norway as his main spot right now. “You in Norway? I’m in Norway. That’s where my man home at,” he explained. The exchange ended on a warmer note with mutual “I love you, bitch” statements and YoungBoy adding “happy birthday, coach” before signing off. The full clip showed two artists navigating accountability without losing the realness that defines their lane.

For hip-hop heads, this moment stands out because it shows YoungBoy choosing growth over ego after a clear emotional trigger. Offset played the role many respect—calling his man out privately first, then handling it on live when needed—while YoungBoy demonstrated the self-awareness that separates lasting figures from those who stay stuck in cycles. The use of “flashed out” and “getting out your body” language, paired with the quick pivot to “we solid niggas, we do what’s right to our family,” landed as authentic rather than performative. It also highlighted how artists like Kentrell DeSean Gaulden, Kiari Kendrell Cephus, Nayvadius DeMun Wilburn, and Johnathan Jamall Porter often settle business in the same public spaces where their music lives.

The clip has sparked the usual mix of reactions in the culture, from praise for the accountability to jokes about the casual “bitch” usage and speculation about possible future collabs now that the air feels clearer. YoungBoy’s decision to let the moment breathe instead of ignoring it or escalating further fits the current wave where more artists are choosing to address issues head-on rather than letting them fester online. At its core, the exchange reinforced that even when emotions run high, the code of checking your people and moving forward still carries weight for those paying attention.

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