SZA Slams White House ICE Video Usage, Sparking Fierce Political Debate
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According to The Fader and The Jasmine Brand, the headline on SZA this week is not music but politics: she publicly blasted the White House after discovering her song Cuffing Season had been used in a pro ICE promotional video without her approval. On X, she called the move evil, boring, and peak dark, accusing the administration of rage baiting artists for free promo and shock tactics. Her longtime TDE collaborator Punch backed her up, calling it nasty business and urging the White House to knock it off. In a sharply worded statement amplified by The Jasmine Brand, the White House fired back with a line tailor built for cable chyrons, thanking SZA for drawing more attention to ICEs work arresting dangerous criminal illegal aliens, turning a licensing dispute into a full blown culture war flashpoint. The Fader reports that this clash instantly became one of the weeks five biggest music stories, cementing SZA not just as a hitmaker but as a visible critic of how political power exploits pop culture.
On the business and legacy front, Essence places SZA alongside the years top earning Black women in entertainment, explicitly crediting her strategic shift into ventures and producing. Essence notes her expanding portfolio, including branded collaborations and film work like her comedic turn with Keke Palmer in the recent movie One of Them Days, which outlets like Ebony have framed as part of her broader crossover into on screen stardom. While exact current deal terms are not fully disclosed, mainstream finance and culture coverage consistently treats her as a rising multi hyphenate whose earnings and leverage are trending up rather than plateauing; any precise net worth figures circulating on social media right now should be considered unconfirmed unless tied to an outlet citing primary financial data such as Forbes.
Socially, her posts calling out the White House have dominated X, Instagram, and TikTok discussion, with fan accounts clipping her language and political commentators debating whether artists can realistically control the afterlife of their songs once they become cultural wallpaper. There are scattered fan rumors about surprise new music tied to the controversy, but no reputable outlet has confirmed an imminent single or album announcement in the past few days, and neither SZA nor her label has issued any formal music related statement this week.
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