Rihanna’s Savage X Fenty brand doesn’t have a theme song yet, but she knows exactly who she would hire to make one if the time comes.
The brand’s official Instagram account shared a new interview on October 19 that was taken at the Savage X Fenty Lavish Lace collection party at Nordstrom on October 10.
In the short video, Alton Mason, a model, asks the Belizean star about her brand, which she started in 2018. In response to being asked who she would have make a theme song for her lingerie and loungewear line, Rihanna said that she might have thought about this before.
She yells, “GloRilla!” and makes the “periodt” hand motion. “Just seeing a young woman who is still true to herself and her roots makes me happy, and I love that.”Right after Rihanna’s statement, Alton Mason said that what she said about GloRilla also applies to the ANTI singer herself. This isn’t the first time Big Glo has made this kind of comparison.
The rising star has said many times that she and Rihanna are “twins,” and fans began to notice the similarity when the cover of her first record, GLORIOUS, came out.
The Memphis native showed off the album’s cover in an Instagram post in September, just a few weeks before it came out on October 11.
Soon after, a Rihanna fan posted a picture of GLORIOUS next to Rih’s first album, Music Of The Sun, to show how close the two songs were.
The fan wrote, “I really see the vision… wait.” In the comments, one fan made fun of Glo’s accent by writing, “her Murrrsic of the Sun wait—”
Another fan put two pictures of Glo next to each other that look like the cover of Rihanna’s 2010 record LOUD. They said, “I’ve never seen Rihanna and Glo in the same room.” “Just saying.”It’s also not the first time Rihanna has talked about how much she loves GloRilla.
Rih recently showed that she likes GloRilla by filming herself dancing to “TGIF,” the rapper’s hit song.
As the camera moved to her boyfriend A$AP Rocky, she lip-synced and got down to the catchy hook, “It’s 7 p.m. Friday/It’s 95 degrees/I ain’t got no n-gga and no n-gga ain’t got me.”
The Harlem artist was confused and amused by his partner’s energy, so he replied in a funny way, “Where my drink at, man?” “This crap is too old for me.”