
After a five-year break, Lil Tay has officially returned to social media.
On Saturday, she released a new music video called Sucker 4 Green and launched yet another attack on her father.
The 14-year-old media phenomenon, who made headlines last month when she said her father was responsible for a death hoax, also went on Instagram Live to discuss why she had vanished from the internet. The influencer gleefully wrote, "IM BACK IM BACK IM BACK LINK IN MY BIO" after sharing a sneak peek of the new music video with her 4.9 million followers on her main Instagram page.
""YALL B****ES THOUGHT THE SHOW WAS OVER. SUCKER 4 GREEN OUT NOW!!!," she added.
The video, which has already received an incredible one million views, features the celebrity flaunting expensive cars while lounging at a mansion in sunny Los Angeles. Tay, meanwhile, claimed her father was responsible for the social media fake that led fans and loved ones to believe she and her brother had died, saying it was all part of a cryptocurrency fraud.
"Money, money, money/I just can't look away from it, I want it, want it, want it' and 'Nothin' wrong with bein' rich and blessed/And I just want a few yachts and mansions right now." she sings.
She also performed choreography with backing dancers, all of whom were dressed in black suits and green ties, to further highlight her dancing abilities. Throughout the video, Tay wore a variety of outfits, including a bright orange pleated miniskirt and a cropped jacket to match. Tay's mother Angela Tian and brother Jason, 21, both made brief appearances at the beginning of the video while sitting inside one of the pricey cars.
Her reappearance occurs just one month after the media personality's death hoax, which started when the teen's Instagram account posted a "statement" from the celebrity's family. According to the since-deleted statement, Tay's brother Jason Tian was also said to have passed away. In addition to talking about her five-year social media hiatus, Lil Tay claimed her father was responsible for the death fake during an Instagram LIVE that happened on Saturday. She posted a picture of her father, Christopher J. Hope, on her posts earlier this week with the caption,
ALSO READ: Lil Tay's Father Clears Name From Accusations He Started the Death Hoax: 'BS!'
"Chris Hope was the one who did the death hoax. He was trying to sabotage me.' She then claimed that her father and another individual had planned to 'fake' her death for a cryptocurrency scheme." ghe celebrity said in a conversation with her admirers.
Christopher Hope informs TMZ that an Instagram story that was uploaded to Lil Tay's official account on Tuesday, portraying him as the mastermind behind the death fake, is not only untrue but also defamatory. He cautions that this matter may end up in civil court.
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