Entertainment
Snoop Dogg Had the Best Reaction to Wiz Khalifa Getting His Kids Stoned for the First Time
In an unexpected turn of events, Snoop Dogg’s two sons didn’t experience their first high with their father.
In a recent interview with SiriusXM’s DJ Whoo Kid, Wiz Khalifa revealed that he got Snoop’s sons Corde and Cordell high during the 2012 filming of Mac & Devin Go to High School.
“We were shooting High School, the movie, and [Snoop] was out of the trailer doing his part,” the “We Own It” rapper, now 37, said, per Billboard. “And he came back in the trailer and was like, ‘Y’all little motherf—ers is high!’”
At the time, Khalifa assumed that Corde and Cordell — who would’ve been around 18 and 15 at the time — had already experimented with weed because of their dad’s proclivities.
“I thought they had already smoked, though!” Khalifa continued. “I’m like, ‘These are Snoop’s kids, of course they smoke!’ They got high with me first. Crazy.”
Meanwhile with his own son, Sebastian, with ex-wife Amber Rose, the rapper once said that he shows up to the 12-year-old’s parent-teacher conferences high.
“Hell yeah. I’m pulling up stoned. They expect it,” Khalifa said on Call Her Daddy in January 2024. “They know what’s up. It’s not like back in the day [where] you’re considered a bad parent if you smoke weed. I’m pretty sure my son smells like weed. I don’t know because I can’t smell it but I’m pretty sure he smells like pot.”
“And yeah I’m pulling up stoned, I’m pulling up high because I want them to connect with the real me. They’re not going to get a fake version of me or this made-up parent that society makes you think that you’re supposed to be. I am who I am, and it’s not because I’m a celebrity or anything.”
“But it’s because it’s really what I believe in and why not get the real me?” he leveled. “Why would I have to change who I am or act like I’m not that just for these places that I’m going to go? That’s not how I’m going to be living my life ever. Hell no.”
Over the weekend, the “Black and Yellow” rapper released his most recent album, Kush + Orange Juice 2, which serves as a sequel to his 2010 record.
“Initially, it was something that I actually told people that I wasn’t into doing a sequel — that I would always leave ‘Kush & Orange Juice’ alone,” he told Grammy.com.
“But when I started working on my next album and what I wanted to be my next project, I just thought, ‘What would be the most satisfying for the fans and the people who support me? Should I start over and do something brand new, or re-create something that they already love and that they’re already used to?’ So that’s what made me make the decision to work on a follow-up.”
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