Doechii gives Ayo Edebiri a lap dance, sending sapphics wild

Doechii performs onstage at Tyler The Creator's Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival

Doechii performs onstage at Tyler The Creator's Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival (Katie Flores/Billboard via Getty Images)

Oh boy, oh boy, oh boy: Doechii giving Ayo Edebiri an on-stage lap dance is the collab we didn’t know we needed, and naturally lesbians are going wild.

The rapper got hot and heavy during her set at Tyler the Creator’s Camp Flog Gnaw carnival, which took place at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles over the weekend.

Edebiri, who is queer, appeared on stage during Doechii’s performance of her 2022 track “Crazy”.

Sitting at what looked like a desk, Edebiri was rolled out on to the stage, fanning her face as the bisexual rapper sensually crawled towards her. Doechii proceeded to climb on to the desk – while the Bottoms star looked up in what can only be described as awe – before, ermmm, gyrating in a very up-close and personal way.

The desk then spun around the stage, lights flashing, as Doechii continued her dance, her arms around the actress’ neck and Edebiri grabbing on to her thighs.

Hot.

After a video of the collaboration appeared on social media, one person wrote on Reddit: “Someone said Ayo don’t know what to do… and I couldn’t agree more, she looks a bit scared.” Another person said: “She’s definitely caught between ‘oh wow’ and ‘what do I do? energy’.”

Ayo Edibiri posing
Ayo Edibiri (Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images)

Someone else asked: “Doechii and Ayo do u f*** with 25 y/o white women who make $15 an hour? Please respond.”

Another said: “I love being Black I love being gay wow.” As one added: “Yeah I won’t be moving on from this any time soon.”

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Doechii came out publicly in 2022 during an interview with GQ, when she admitted she had not always been comfortable speaking about her sexuality.

“I started becoming comfortable with it when I started getting more gay friends,” she said. “I always knew I was queer, bisexual. But I didn’t really feel comfortable talking about it because nobody around me was gay. So, it’s not like I was hiding it but I also wasn’t fully embracing it.

“I just started indulging myself with more friends who were like me. That’s when I could become more comfortable talking about it because that’s my normal every-day conversation now with my gay friends.

“A lot of the LGBTQ community, especially the trans community, really embraced my sound for ‘Yucky Blucky [Fruitcake]’ and people found empowerment behind it, which was cool.”

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