According to Billboard Influencer Natalie Henderson—better known online as SlimDaBodyLast has filed a copyright lawsuit claiming that mega-rapper GloRilla lifted her viral line almost word-for-word for use in her song ‘Never Find’.
Henderson says she popularized the phrase “All natural, no BBL / Mad hoes go to hell” in her original New Orleans bounce track.
GloRilla’s version in Never Find’ goes:
“Natural, no BBL / but I’m still gon’ give him hell…”
Per Natalie, it’s more than similarity—it’s copy, alleging “unmistakable similarities” in lyrics, melody, arrangement, and core expression
In a case filed Wednesday (June 20) in Louisiana federal court, Henderson claims that GloRilla (Gloria Woods) violated federal copyright law by copying those lyrics into her 2024 track “Never Find”.
“There are unmistakable similarities between the two works,” Henderson’s attorney writes. “Based upon a side-by-side comparison of the two songs, a layperson could hear similarities in the lyrics, arrangement, melody, core expression, content, and other compositional elements in both songs and conclude that songs are essentially identical.”
“Never Find,” featuring K Carbon, was featured on GloRilla’s debut studio album Glorious, which peaked at No. 5 on the Billboard 200 and ended up as the top-selling female rap album last year. The song itself, a bonus track, did not chart.
It’s unclear whether the copying of such a small snippet of words amounts to infringement.
Copyright law does not cover short phrases, including slogans and taglines, nor does it cover commonplace material that’s been widely used by others.
Whether the allegations against GloRilla clear those thresholds will be decided by a federal judge.
This isn’t Glo’s first legal detour—she was previously sued by Plies in 2024 over a sample issue, but that case was dropped.
GloRilla hasn’t publicly commented on the lawsuit yet.