“Y’all be safe tho” - $1.2M NIL-valued Flau’jae Johnson has a carefree message for haters via the latest post on X

Syndication: The Daily Advertiser
Syndication: The Daily Advertiser

Flau’jae Johnson, who overtook Angel Reese as LSU's top scorer in the recent NCAA tournament, shared that she will never respond to hate.

Johnson whose thriving rapping career is also a massive factor in her stardom and NIL deals took to X and wrote:

"I’ll never respond to the hate, I get and give too much love. Y’all be safe tho."

As LSU's Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark moved to the WNBA, Flau’jae Johnson is the top earner in college basketball and certainly getting "too much love". Flau’jae has signed deals with multiple companies including Puma, Meta, JBL, and Taco Bell.

LSU's Olivia Dunne and Flau’jae Johnson are the only female athletes in ON3's NIL 100 list. Flaujae ranks 14th in the list. Johnson earns more than JuJu Watkins and UConn Huskies star Paige Bueckers with a NIL value of $1.2 million, per On3.

Her basketball exploits too have been attracting attention this season. Flau’jae Johnson posted a decent average of 14.9 points, 5.5 rebounds, and 2.5 assists in the 2023-24 season. She also had a field goal percentage of 50.4 and shot 38 percent from the 3-point range.

Also read: $1.1 million NIL-valued Flau'Jae Johnson reveals struggles of being both a rapper and a player: "I rap and I hoop, so I know I got to go extra hard"

Flau’jae Johnson preaches love in her raps as well

Flau’jae has a massive 175000 listeners on Spotify. Her rap 'Big 4' has 1.4 million views on YouTube. Her music is flourishing like her basketball career. Johnson recently signed a multimillion-dollar deal with Jay-Z Roc Nation.

LSU star who has got her hands on prestigious awards like McDonald's All-American and helped her team win the national championship as a freshman recently laid bare her motivations behind rapping:

“I try to help people go through what they are going through. It’s always something I’m going through, too. I just know how to bottle it up and put it in music. It’s like therapy.”

What do you think about Flaujae Johnson as a rapper and a basketball player? Let us know in the comments.

What could Alabama basketball's 2024-25 starting lineup look like? Find out here

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