While some celebs like Kim Kardashian and Kanye West have gone overboard (or is it under-board?) when it comes to minimalism, in Drake’s case more is definitely too much. I’m sorry to everyone who styles themselves like an extra in The Queen of Versailles, but this house is…a lot. It’s a lot of head room.Īnd honestly, as much as I, someone who is self-isolating in a Polly Pocket-sized apartment with two roommates, should feel annoyed, this is really just tugging at my heart strings because Drake’s home honestly feels like a glaring physical representation of his ertswhile “Sad Boy Aesthetic.” SBA (copyright pending), is a persona the rapper has built his career on, from rapping about the best girl who got away in 2012 to longingly (and publicly) lusting after Rihanna for over a decade, Drake has made his millions off of being the emotional guy who can’t catch a break in love.Īnd whether or not he intended it to, the 6ix God’s house is making me feel the same way hit tracks like “Weston Road Flows” do: straight up sad. I swear to God there is enough space above his head in the image to fit about four Pascale Siakams. The cover of the magazine, released on April 8, features a photo of Drizzy in his marble- and wood-clad living/piano room, decked out in a monochromatic ‘fit and looking like a tiny bearded Lego man. And now, after Architectural Digest released their May 2020 issue featuring the Canadian in his serious palatial Toronto home, my eyes will never be the same.ĭesigned by Canadian architect and interior designer Ferris Rafauli, Drizzy’s home is 50,000 square feet, features a NBA-sized basketball court, literally cathedral-esque ceilings and is built with, per the magazine, “noble materials.” *eye roll* In 2013 Drake declared that Nothing Was the Same.
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