When I was first coming out, I was definitely getting a lot of comparisons to Trina.

My mom was a rapper and she really shaped me as a woman, and the music that she was letting me listen to as a child really pushed me in the direction that I'm going in right now.

I want to show other girls how happy I am and how confident I am, how I still want to go to school and I still want to rap.

I'm not a character, so how I rap is just an everyday thing.

I'm not a fake person.

Sometimes, when you're doing too much, things get overwhelming. So I just have to calm myself down and think, 'What would my mama want me to do?'

My momma wasn't a weak person and she wasn't a complainer. So I don't wanna be like that.

Girls, we have to go 10 times harder than guys. We are still expected to give you the bars, give you the look, give you the routine. This is me - I wanna be a rapper, this is it.

I'm a pretty open person, and very little can embarrass me.

I really like how the characters always has to go through some type of long journey that's like a crazy struggle. And these anime shows give women power. She's always the queen or somebody that you cannot beat - I love that.

There were so many different labels coming to me and they just didn't seem right, but 300... they wanted me bad. It felt like a family.

How I am in the booth, how I am when I meet you, that's how I am in general.

We gon' be a household name!

I definitely wanna open up some assisted-living facilities around my city.

My mom is the first female rapper I've ever known. I'm thinking, like, Okay, yeah, this is normal. Everybody's doing this.

I definitely feel like people in the South are a little more raw. Our whole swag, the way we talk... When I go to the East Coast, people automatically know I'm not from there.

Tina Snow' was more turnt up than anything I ever dropped, it's my alter ego.

I'm going to always have a home in Houston, I'm going to always come back.

I don't feel like I sound like anybody from Houston. I don't really feel like I have that Houston flow, that Houston sound. I feel like it's a mixture of all the things I've listened to growing up, or even my mom, in a way. I feel like I have my own style.

Men are objects to me.

You know how many men make music without biting each other's heads off? Why do we have to do that? There's room for everybody. I really couldn't care less what the next girl's doing. If she's shining, that's good. It's not taking away from my light.

I love seeing women do what they do.

What I say is how I feel.

That's what I feel like my music represents - having no limits or restrictions.