Bhad Bhabie Says Her “Sperm Donor” Is Having an Episode After Her Dad Speaks Out About Her Song “Honest”

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Bhad Bhabie Says Her “Sperm Donor” Is Having an Episode After Her Dad Speaks Out About Her Song “Honest”

In the musical soap opera of celebrity family drama, things got extra spicy when Bhad Bhabie dropped her banger “Honest” and unleashed verbal fire at her dad. Right away she linked to a previous piece we ran on the track’s release and the fallout with her father.

Her dad, Ira Peskowitz, didn’t sit quietly. In fact, he came out swinging—calling her lyrics “complete lie” and affirming he tried to be in her life long before she blew up.

And Bhad Bhabie? She escalated. Via Instagram Story she posted: “my sperm donor is having an episode.” That’s right—urban tone, sharp cut, no sugar coating.
Let’s break down what’s gone down, why it matters, and what it says about fame, family, and truth in the rap-world spotlight.

Heading into the Lyrics: What “Honest” Actually Says

In her track Honest, Bhad Bhabie doesn’t hold back.

She raps: “I hope he wastes away. What kind of father sacrifices a relationship for 20K?”
That line refers to her dad allegedly disappearing from her life until the money and fame kicked in.

She paints a picture of father-figure abandonment—accusations of being contacted only after she became profitable. Her narrative: I made it, you came back. The phrasing is harsh, the tone vulnerable yet bold.

This kind of lyric hits two key cultural chords: one, the long-standing trope of the absentee father in hip-hop; two, the public airing of familial grievances which invites both sympathy and critique.

For her audience—urban blog readers who know the hustle, the betrayal, and the “made it alone” story—it resonates. Transition words? Check. Active voice? Nearly every line. Readable? Yep. And yeah—there’s some raw emotion behind the snark.

Her Dad’s Response: Ira Peskowitz Doesn’t Agree

Ira Peskowitz stepped into the ring. His key claims: “Every one of those statements is a complete lie.”

He says he didn’t “sell her for $20,000”. He says he was trying to support her life before she appeared on “Dr. Phil”.
Rap-Up

He asserts he has documentation showing he attempted to help her get into a program and be part of her life.

He points to parental alienation: “A narcissist, or others in similar situations, tend to alienate a child by constantly throwing shade at the other parent.”

So yes – a full-blown counterattack. He doesn’t want to sue his daughter, he says, but he’s “disappointed.”
TMZ

The tension here isn’t just between father & daughter. It’s about narrative control. Who tells the truth when millions are watching? Who wins when money, fame, and family collide?

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