Jun 20 2008
Kid Sister and her aqua nails

Kid Sister’s Complex Relationship Tips: Get A Little Booty

Kid Sister is nominated in BET’s best female rap album category, despite the retail fact, if you walked into Virgin Megastore, you wouldn’t be able to find a Kid Sister album on the shelves - it doesn’t exist >> yet. Melissa Young (her government name) is working to correct that. On August 5, her debut album Koko B. Ware will be available.

So why all the attention? She’s fashionable, makes ‘cool kid’ music and has that onion going for herself.

In this month’s Complex, Kid Sister gets laid out…

kid Sister in Complex magazine

kid Sister in Complex magazine

kid Sister in Complex magazine

and dishes relationship advice. Take two.

My girl has no reason to distrust me, but I’d never give her access to my e-mail or my phone.

Kid Sister says:

“When you reach a certain point in a relationship, you automatically have access to those things. I wouldn’t want anyone in my shit until after six months. My boyfriend and I have nothing to hide, though, so we’re all up in each other’s stuff—not investigating, but he has access if he wants, and I have access if I want. For instance—this is ghetto—but I didn’t get a computer until about six months ago. So when I was on the road, I’d ask him, ‘Baby, can you check my email and add my MySpace friends for me so I don’t look like a loser?’”

Is it a good look to work in the same industry as the woman I’m seeing?

Kid Sister says:
“If you’re working in an office, it would suck to break up with someone in the cubicle next to you, and then you’re like, ‘Hey, do you want to go get lunch?’ [Laughs.] Then again, if you’re dating someone who works in your industry, you probably run in the same social circles anyway. The risk is the shame, but what are you going to do? Just go for it and get a little booty if you can.”

>> More at Complex Women // Kid Sister


☼ What's Your Opinion? ☼

1 Roque Fri, Dec 04, 2015 - 2:17 pm

The first time my kids got phones it was becsaue they were going to be home alone in the early morning before school. They were 12, 11, 9. Then when the school year was over we took the phones. The next time they got phones becsaue of a lot of after school activities they were 14, 13, and 11. I think it’s okay as long as we set boundaries.

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