Lizzo Calls Out Unwanted Filming And Clears The Air on Studio Plans

Lizzo pushed back hard on Wednesday. A video had made the rounds of her caught off-guard, hungover, mid-conversation with a fan.
The Grammy-winning singer went on Instagram to address it directly. Her tone was exasperated and clear: “You guys are being very weirdddddd,” she wrote, asking people not to take a video of her in that kind of moment and spin it into something uglier. She was, by her own account, talking to the fan about why she’s been spending time in the studio. Someone filmed it anyway.
What bothered Lizzo wasn’t the footage itself. It was the direction she felt it was heading. She pushed back on what she described as a “nasty narrative” – one built around small, private moments taken out of context. She rejected the framing, and she wasn’t gentle about it.
The timing means something. Lizzo’s last studio album, Special, arrived in 2022. In 2023, a lawsuit filed by former dancers put her at the center of one of the biggest public controversies of her career. She denied all allegations and addressed them publicly. After that, she pulled back from the spotlight considerably.
She hadn’t released a new album in those three years. Her early run had positioned her as one of the most distinctive pop voices of her generation. Hits like “Truth Hurts” and “Juice” became cultural touchstones, and the Grammy wins followed. The 2023 fallout changed the public conversation around her in ways that felt difficult to shake.
So a studio mention in 2026 carries weight. Her fanbase has been patient, and they notice these things.
Her message closed with a line that felt personal and deliberate: “I’m happy and proud of myself! Boop.” No PR gloss to it. No media training in that sentence. It sounds exactly like her.
That kind of directness has defined Lizzo’s public persona from the beginning. It showed up in her music and in her performances. She’s always talked back to critics in the same way. Wednesday’s post is consistent with that version of her.
Fan comments skewed supportive. Many pushed back on the idea of filming someone in a candid, off-the-clock moment without their consent. Others zeroed in on the studio confirmation, treating it as a signal that something new might actually be in the works.
The situation is a familiar one for celebrities at her level. Every public interaction now carries the possibility of ending up as a clip. Most go nowhere. Some get shaped into a story the person never agreed to tell.
That’s exactly what Lizzo was calling out. Not just being filmed, but being framed.
She didn’t announce an album. She didn’t name a release date. She said she’s in the studio. She’s happy, and she’s proud of herself. For right now, that’s the whole story.
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