Charleston White just entered another arena, but this time with the baby mama of Island Boy Flyysoulja. A sarcastic dig directed at her child made all maternal tendencies kick into overdrive.
It began in an overwrought moment during one of Charleston's many blunt interviews, the ones you can't tell if you're watching a chat show or a bomb ready to go off. Everything was business as usual until a highly unamused woman rolled up on the set, interrupted the interview, and outright took the microphone from White's hand.
The woman, clearly tired of Charleston referring to her baby as "ugly," did not hesitate to tell him how she felt about his offhand and very disrespectful comments. But rather than present even a scrap of an apology or second thought, White did what White does: he laughed and smiled. Unfazed and unapologetically himself, he just let her vent and then watched her walk off without the result she likely came seeking.
Then, if there was any doubt that he regretted what he said, Charleston expedited the clarification.
"The baby is still ugly! I don't care what she says," he shot back after the confrontation, hardly skipping a beat. "That doesn't take away from the way that baby looks. Hopefully, the baby will grow up to be something better than what his daddy looks like. And behave much better. B#### f###### with me regarding her baby. She knows what that baby looks like. She made it, I didn't."
Charleston White has made a name for himself by never pulling any punches. But while some regard him as unvarnished, others deem this roast on children no less a bridge too far. The internet is split, with one side defending the right of a mother to protect her child and the other chortling in Charleston's shock-jock-esque vein.
No matter which side you fall on, Charleston White is the type of guy who could end up in a full-on feud by ordering a coffee wrong. And this latest clash? This is another entry in the big "Things You Really Shouldn't Say But Charleston Said Anyway" book.
All we can do is hope, for the baby's sake, that all the adults involved eventually outgrow this drama. But until then, there's nothing like the wild world of viral beef, snatched mics, and words you can't take back, particularly when a camera is rolling.
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