Wanting To Be A Normal Human, Lizzo Resigns From The Entertainment Industry

JAKARTA - Lizzo said that she would quit the entertainment world that had made her name. The singer from the United States uploaded a statement via Instagram.

I'm getting tired of being dragged by everyone in my life and on the internet. All I want is to make music and make people happy and help the world get a little better than when I found it. But I started to feel the world didn't want me to participate," Lizzo wrote in an Instagram post as quoted Monday, April 1.

In the upload, Lizzo felt constantly facing the lies that were reported about her because of the influence and views of others. He also feels that he is being targeted by jokes all the time because of his appearance.

My character is vilified by people who don't know me and don't respect me. I didn't register for this. I STOPPED," he said.

One week earlier, Lizzo via Instagram revealed she was working on new music and was almost ready to 'be a normal human being again' who loves and trusts people.

He also stated to try and get new friends to continue live broadcasts, to sing and talk about pain and joy.

"Thank you for your patience and for those who stopped following, thank you too because now I know where we stand," he said.

The singer of Aboutction Time has been in the spotlight over the past year for being involved in harassment lawsuits filed by the three former singer dancers in August 2023.

The lawsuit was filed in Los Angeles by dancer Arianna Davis, Crystal Williams, and Noelle Rodriguez accusing Lizzo (real name Melissa Jefferson) and her Big Grrrl Big Touring Inc. of committing various violations of the law and including dozens of pages of detailed accusations.

In one of the allegations, the lawsuit claims that Lizzo encourages dancers to attend a well-known porn show in Amsterdam's Red Light District and then pressure them to interact with the dancers.

The lawsuit also details Lizzo's alleged outburst of anger, including a violent re-audition in April after she accused dancers of drinking alcohol before the show.

Even one of the dancers stated that the trials lasted so long that he died because he was afraid he would be fired if he left the stage.

The case also claims that Lizzo has repeatedly told dancers there is no safe job for them and raised concerns about a dancer's weight gain.

Lizzo denied the claims in her response shared on Twitter, calling them false accusations and sensational stories.

In March, a judge ordered the case to be postponed while Lizzo challenged her decision in January, which largely rejected her attempts to dismiss the lawsuit under California's anti-SLAPP law, a special law that made it easier to immediately end inappropriate lawsuits and threaten freedom of expression.