Wiz Khalifa Admits He Attends His Son’s Parent-Teacher Conferences High AF
While Wiz Khalifa is best known as a rapper, his love for cannabis might tower that. And even in daddy mode, he never shies away from Mary Jane.
During the latest episode of the "Call Her Daddy" podcast, the "Young, Wild & Free" performer revealed that he attends his 10-year-old son Sebastian's parent-teacher conferences high, as reported by PEOPLE. Yes, you read that correctly. High.
"Hell yeah. I'm pulling up stoned. They expect it," Khalifa explained. "They know what's up. It's not like back in the day [where] you're considered a bad parent if you smoke weed. I'm pretty sure my son smells like weed. I don't know because I can't smell it but I'm pretty sure he smells like pot."
"And yeah I'm pulling up stoned, I'm pulling up high because I want them to connect with the real me. They're not going to get a fake version of me or this made-up parent that society makes you think that you're supposed to be. I am who I am, and it's not because I'm a celebrity or anything."
He continued, "But it's because it's really what I believe in and why not get the real me?" he elaborated. "Why would I have to change who I am or act like I'm not that just for these places that I'm going to go? That's not how I'm going to be living my life ever. Hell no."
The "Work Hard, Play Hard" rapper co-parents the pre-teen with ex-wife Amber Rose, whom she dubs her "best friend."
“I think that me and Wiz are so, best friends now, that — we’re so far past being in love that I can say that now, right? It’s not like anything that we would circle back to or anything. We’re just friends and co-parents,” she said while on the "Tamron Hall" show.
Khalifa credits his son for motivating him to step up his game along his fatherhood journey. In 2019, the rapper starred in his docuseries "Wiz Khalifa: Behind the Cam" and discussed how Sebastian changed his worldview.
"Bash is a huge part of that transition — and not being with his mother, too, because it forced me to be more responsible and do the things I wouldn't normally do," he noted. "The older that he gets, the more influence I have on him. So it's not as much as just makin' sure he's good; it's actually being there."