Angel Haze is the Detroit native rapper who has been filling her Twitter feed with love for Ireland Baldwin. The latest photo shows Haze and Alec’s daughter making out. Another recent tweet went like this:
I just wanna say you're mine you're mineeeee. Fuck what you heard RT @IrelandBBaldwin: pic.twitter.com/YlTrHt6tVa
— Angxl Hxze (@AngelHaze) May 2, 2014
Here’s what you need to know about Alec’s future, possible, daughter-in-law:
1. Haze is Pansexual
I’m very very excited for what is about to happen.
— Angxl Hxze (@AngelHaze) May 7, 2014
Haze has said that she is a pansexual. Simply put, she desires both sexes. Haze told The Guardian in an interview:
Love is boundary-less. If you can make me feel, if you can make me laugh – and that’s hard – then I can be with you. I don’t care if you have a vagina or if you’re a hermaphrodite or whatever.
2. Her Love Ireland is Clear on Twitter
Angel Haze has turned her Twitter account into a photo gallery of her and Ireland Baldwin just chillin’.
Find what you love and let it consume you. pic.twitter.com/ym1WRATGDZ
— Angxl Hxze (@AngelHaze) May 6, 2014
Oh. While I work, you stay home and do this? RT @IrelandBBaldwin: lazy Saturday nights pic.twitter.com/RGtCeqxIAB
— Angxl Hxze (@AngelHaze) May 5, 2014
— Angxl Hxze (@AngelHaze) May 6, 2014
3. Haze Grew Up in a Cult
She was raised in Detroit in a military family of mixed ethnicity between African-American and Native-American. Haze was also raised in the Greater Apostolic Faith, something she referred to as a “cult.” Eventually, her family fled the church, and moved to Brooklyn, New York.
4. She Faced Repeated Sexual Assault as a Child
In her cover of Eminem’s “Cleaning Out My Closet”, Haze discusses how she was sexually assaulted by two men from the age of seven. Haze never told anyone about the abuse because she was scared nobody would believe her.
5. Her First Album Dropped in December 2013
Her music career began in controversy. Haze’s debut album Dirty Gold, was leaked by Haze herself after a dispute with her label. The album sold less than 1,000 copies in the U.S. during its first week of release.