

He recently joined protesters in his homtown and announced that he is working with Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms on a justice reform initiative. Baby continues to show his support for the Black Lives Matter movement. Proceeds from the song will benefit three different organizations that promote social justice. The song opens with clips from newscasters discussing the death of George Floyd before Lil Baby. He also uses his voice to demand change: “It’s bigger than Black and White / It’s a problem with the whole way of life / It can’t change overnight / But we gotta start some where / Might as well gone ‘head start here.” Lil Baby, The Bigger Story, June 12, 2020, Universal, digital. Lil Baby - The Bigger Picture Artwork Classic T-Shirt.
BIGGER PICTURE LIL BABY MEANING LICENSE
© 2020 Quality Control Music, LLC, under exclusive license to UMG Recordings, Inc.http:/. “Fu**ed up I seen what I seen / I guess that mean hold him down if he say he can’t breathe / It’s too many mothers that grieving / They killing us for no reason / Been going on for too long to get even.” Shop high-quality unique The Bigger Picture T-Shirts designed and sold by independent artists. Music video by Lil Baby performing The Bigger Picture (Lyric Video). Throughout the rest of the track, Baby references his own experiences with the unjust criminal justice system and the senselessness of violence against black Americans. The Bigger Picture is truly a song fitting for the times. The song opens with a news clip concerning the militarized police response to the peaceful protests in Minneapolis. Alongside Spillage Village, YG, and Kiana Led, Lil Baby has created his track, The Bigger Picture, addressing the discrimination black people face in the United States and even more broadly the racial inequity that exists throughout the entire country. “I find it crazy the police will shoot you and know that you dead but still tell you to freeze,” raps Baby. An angry Lil Baby released 'The Bigger Picture' in response to the social unrest arising from the killing of George Floyd at the hands of four Minneapolis police officers. As protests against police brutality continue across the country following the killing of George Floyd, the Atlanta rapper speaks out on “The Bigger Picture.” On the powerful anthem, the 25-year-old MC pays tribute to Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery (“God bless their souls every one of the names”), while addressing the systematic racism and violence at the hands of the police.
