I know people use phrases like âheâs changing the gameâ and ânobodyâs doing it like himâ a lot for musicians, but I donât think this is an exaggeration at all when talking about Lil Nas X.Â
When I first saw the music video for Montero (Call Me By Your Name), I just kept thinking about how I had never seen a music video like it, ESPECIALLY from such a well-known artist. Iâve seen plenty of videos where a man is being sexy, but never in the way that Lil Nas X does it in that video. He sings about riding dick while giving a lap dance. Iâm sure there are so many music videos where a male singer does this, but Iâve never seen them because gay men who express their sexuality in that way are usually prevented from becoming household names.
And he is getting a lot of pushback for it. People are saying that heâs trying to indoctrinate children, that heâs pushing an agenda, that heâs part of the ruination of society. Gay men are seen as sex-crazy predators, and so are androgynous men. For him to make this video expressing himself and his sexuality in the way HE wanted to, knowing how people would take it, especially as a black man, and then attaching his real name to it?
Itâs trending at #1 on youtube and thereâs been a huge positive response to it, but heâs risking a lot by releasing this video. The whole theme of the video is religious persecution, and weâre seeing that exact thing happen to him in real time. Heâs being called a sinner, heâs being told heâs going to hell, heâs being told that god doesnât love him.Â
This song and video are resonating with SO MANY people. People who grew up with a religion that teaches that people like them are wrong, with parents who seek to destroy what they do not understand, who have had a closeted partner who only told them they loved them in private, who told themselves that they would never come out to anyone, with people who have struggled with internalized homophobia.Â
Since the world already has their eyes on Lil Nas X, heâs decided to represent himself the way he wants to and tell the stories he wants to tell. From this video to wearing a bright pink leather harness on the red carpet to doing drag on halloween, he is showing everyone that he is not ashamed of who he is and heâs willing to put himself and his career at risk to be that person. By doing this, heâs showing others that people like him exist and itâs ok and itâs good.
Lil Nas X is changing the game. His success will open doors for more artists like him. I believe heâs going to help change the public perception of what hip-hop can be, and maybe even what a man can be.
I agree entirely with the above, but I think itâs important to remember that Lil Nas X was outed. I think itâs rrally important to this conversation that we remember that Lil Nas X released a song that made him popular in a mostly-white section of music, and somebody hated that so much that they outed him to try and derail his career.
When we talk about Lil Nas X, we talk as though this flamboyant gay man is what he set out to show us. But the truth is he was a closeted gay man who wanted to make music, and the same voices that object to him now are the ones who wouldnât let him exist in their spaces when he was trying to be as accomodating to them as possible.
The fact that LNX has embraced their attack on him and turned it into his brand is a mark of his strength and courage, but it does not lessen their malice. And I think any conversation about how he chooses to perform should acknowledge that he was tormented by these people who are now so offended that he wonât respect them.
































