Blueface Learns He Impregnated Another Woman During Livestream Voicemail

During an April 24 livestream Blueface played a voicemail in which a woman said she was pregnant with his child. The message, heard in front of his pregnant girlfriend Nevaeh, fueled fresh criticism about his public behavior and parenting.

Livestream culture has a way of turning private chaos into public content. Blueface’s April 24 broadcast—part spectacle, part overshare—became the latest example: mid-stream he played a voicemail from a woman telling him she was pregnant with his child. It was blunt, furious and, for viewers, immediate.

On the call the woman doesn’t hold back, naming two dates and making a firm ultimatum.

“Now you don’t know who the f**k you nutted in, b**ch? You nutted in me twice. On Easter and the 13th. So what the f**k are you talking about. So, suprise, b**ch, you got me pregnant. And guess what, b**ch. I’m not getting no f**king abortion.”

Blueface—born Jonathan Porter—played the message while his current girlfriend, Nevaeh, who is already pregnant, sat beside him. Her reaction was immediate and physical: “I think about about to sock you in your sh*t,” she yelled on camera.

The clip crystallized a pattern fans and critics have watched unfold. Since being released last November, Blueface has been in the headlines for his personal life as much as his music; he currently has three children and has reportedly impregnated two more women since his return to public life. His breakout single “Thotiana” made him a mainstream figure in 2018, but in recent years his livestreams and social media have often overshadowed new releases.

During the same stream, Blueface acknowledged recurring sexual behavior and framed it as something he struggles to control.

“It feel so good, though. I can’t stop,” he said. “I think I need to go see the therapist about that sh*t.”

Elsewhere, the rapper has faced blowback for how he handles parenthood in public. Last week he drew criticism after footage circulated of his daughter throwing a tantrum in a shoe store while he appeared not to intervene—another clip that fueled conversations about accountability among artists who broadcast their lives for clicks.

Blueface’s mix of brash persona and off-the-cuff livestream moments keeps him culturally relevant in the moment, but it also raises familiar questions: what happens when private crises become part of an artist’s public brand? In interviews and features since his rise, he’s vacillated between earnestness and provocation—showmanship that once translated into viral music videos and label interest, but now frequently greets headlines about personal drama.

Speaking to the larger picture, the voicemail incident is less an isolated scandal than part of a longer arc: a young artist whose breakthrough hit connected him to mainstream rap, now navigating the messy overlap of fame, family and the performative impulses of modern celebrity.

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