On Yo Favorite Trappa Favorite Rappa, Sexyy Red fully embraces the mixtape energy that built her name, but this time it’s tighter, more intentional, and structured like a full-length statement. Hosted by DJ Holiday, the project leans into personality-driven trap—unfiltered, funny, and still rooted in St. Louis grit.
Across 18 tracks, Sexyy Red balances viral-ready moments with street-coded storytelling, bringing in heavy production names like Metro Boomin and ATL Jacob while keeping her signature reckless charm intact. It’s not about polish—it’s about presence.


Standout Tracks Running the Tape
- “Her Her Her” (feat. DJ Holiday)
The opener sets the tone immediately. With DJ Holiday’s tags woven through the production, Sexyy Red wastes no time establishing the project’s chaotic, self-aware energy. It feels like stepping straight into her world mid-conversation.
- “Richer Than Alla My Opps”
A brash, flex-heavy anthem that thrives on repetition and confidence. It’s classic Sexyy Red—minimalist hook, maximum attitude—and it works because she sells every line like a victory lap. - “Tatted ASF” (feat. Metro Boomin)
One of the cleanest production moments on the album. Metro Boomin gives her space to float while she delivers blunt, catchy bars about lifestyle and identity. It’s polished without losing edge. - “Hang Wit a Bad Bitch” (feat. Key Glock)
A standout collab that feels natural rather than forced. Key Glock matches her energy perfectly over a Memphis-influenced bounce, making this one of the most replayable records on the tape. - “Yop (U Wit A Star)” (feat. Metro Boomin)
A closing highlight that leans more atmospheric. The production stretches out, giving Sexyy Red a slightly more reflective lane while still keeping things firmly in her signature lane of confidence and chaos.
Sexyy Red Owns Her Lane…Louder Than Ever
Yo Favorite Trappa Favorite Rappa doesn’t reinvent Sexyy Red—it refines her. The humor is sharper, the sequencing tighter, and the production pool stronger, but the core remains the same: unfiltered personality over everything.
For Gen Z and millennial listeners, this project feels like internet culture in rap form—messy, memeable, and impossible to ignore. Sexyy Red isn’t chasing evolution here. She’s doubling down on dominance.



