Last weekend, fans felt slighted on 21 Savageâs behalf when the Grammys came and went with barely a mention of the double nominee or his detainment by ICE officials over his immigration status. (Producer Ludwig GĂśransson was the only person to mention 21 Savage by name, and you might not have even spotted Post Maloneâs âFree 21 Savageâ shirt, as it was under his jacket.) Following his release on bond after nine days in custody, the British-born, Atlanta-raised musician says he honestly wasnât bothered by the fact most of his peers didnât offer any verbal support. âNah, I was stressed about getting out,â he tells the New York Times in a new interview. âThe Grammys is the Grammys, but when you in jail, the Grammys is nothing.â
âI donât care what nobody say â everybody in that building whoâs connected to this culture, I was on their mind in some type of way,â 21 Savage continues. âThatâs all that mattered. They didnât have to say it âcause everybody knew it. It was in the air. All the people that was there, they said the words in other places and that matter just as much. All the big artists was vocal about the situation, so I was appreciative.â
Instead, the rapper, who says he became aware he lacked legal status as a teen, âprobably like the age when you start to get your driverâs license,â after overstaying his visa, is focused on staying in the country. âMy situation is important âcause I represent poor black Americans and I represent poor immigrant Americans,â he says. âYou gotta think about all the millions of people that ainât 21 Savage thatâs in 21 Savage shoes.â He is currently reportedly waiting for an expedited hearing.
Oh, and despite how hard you all went, 21 Savage says he even liked your memes about how British he is. Or, at least, he acknowledges them. âSome of them was funny â I ainât gonna lie,â he jokes. âI was appreciative of that.â