Meek Mill Says He Might Try Having 'Sister Wives': 'F*ck It'

Meek Mill previously asked fans about having two girlfriends.

Meek Mill attends the game between the LA Clippers and the Philadelphia 76ers on November 17, 2025 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Image via David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images

Meek Mill is back to using X as his personal journal, and this time, the rapper is publicly considering having "sister wives."

On Tuesday, Meek tweeted, “Ima try sister wives because I never did for the winter….. fuck it,” a line that immediately drew attention on social media.

The post arrives on the heels of Meek openly mulling the idea of juggling more than one romantic partner at a time.

Last week, he asked his nearly 11 million followers whether having “2 girlfriends walking around my house” was morally wrong, sparking thousands of replies ranging from support to pure comedy.

The Philly star has been tapping into X more than ever lately, using it as a space to ask questions, vent, and toss out whatever’s on his mind.

Meek’s dating life has long been of public interest, particularly during his high-profile relationship with Nicki Minaj from 2015 to 2017. But his recent posts suggest he’s leaning into a phase of curiosity, humor, and maybe even a little experimentation.

Despite pondering the logistics and ethics of managing multiple partners, Meek didn’t linger on the topic. Not long after his questions went viral, he redirected his attention entirely, telling fans he was headed to Art Basel in December, jokingly giving the impression that Miami’s biggest art week might double as his search grounds for two girlfriends.

In September, Meek offered a blunt critique of the state of the music industry. The rapper argued that rap isn’t struggling creatively; it’s suffering because of how listeners consume music today. He pointed to the shift from physical copies to the current streaming landscape, saying the system that delivers music to fans has become a “disservice” to artists.

Meek reflected on having lived through every major era of modern music consumption, from CDs and mixtape hubs like DatPiff to the rise of viral moments and DSP dominance.

For him, the problem isn’t the art or the artists but the platforms and algorithms shaping what gets heard.

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