Top 71 Quotes & Sayings by Lil Dicky

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Lil Dicky.
Last updated on November 25, 2024.
Lil Dicky

David Andrew Burd, better known by his stage name Lil Dicky, is an American rapper, comedian, and actor. He came to prominence with the release of the music video for his song "Ex-Boyfriend" in 2013, which became popular with more than one million views on YouTube in 24 hours. He released his debut album, Professional Rapper, in 2015.

I wanted to explain that just because I'm rapping in this funny way doesn't mean that I'm not worthy of actually being evaluated as a rapper.
I'm a relatively cheap person who, to me, it's not cool to overspend; it's cool to get a great deal.
I grew up upper middle class. — © Lil Dicky
I grew up upper middle class.
I don't necessarily think that when I graduated college, I had a plan to work at an ad agency. I had a plan in terms of getting the best job I could, like, just whatever normal job.
In my heart, I believe I'm a top flight comedian and a top flight rapper.
Being funny is my biggest differentiator, and I think I'd be a fool not to use that, and there's nothing I enjoy personally more than making a human being laugh. But then, I also think I have a serious side to me.
Working at the ad agency showed me just how possible things were from a production standpoint.
I'm not ever going to stop rapping. I love rap.
I care most about what rappers think about me as a rapper, and I've gotten a lot of praise. I think rappers understand I'm a really good rapper, and that means more to me than a random person, you know, 'cause they know what goes into making rap music.
I grew up when Chris Brown was, like, an icon. He was my ringtone when I was in high school.
I will be in a position where I can afford the Bugatti, but I most certainly won't be buying it.
I think people just have to realize that music grows, and hip-hop evolves. I mean, everything evolves.
It's not that I'm playing a rapper. I definitely feel like I'm a legitimate rapper. I just think that, who I am, there's more to me than just being a rapper. — © Lil Dicky
It's not that I'm playing a rapper. I definitely feel like I'm a legitimate rapper. I just think that, who I am, there's more to me than just being a rapper.
I'm not a big festivalgoer as in, like, a citizen.
Personally, I feel like I'm trying to redefine what a really good rapper can be like. Like, I think it's not often where a good rapper can be making funny music.
I don't think any artist has really relied on music videos the way I do. It's almost like my radio.
Usually, I think of the song, and then the video plays out in my head as I'm writing the song. I started rapping to become a comedian, so I'm certainly thinking about the visual component of things beyond just the music most of the time.
I think, between me and Chris Brown, if you combined our games, you'd get, like, a real Division I basketball player.
Growing up, the one thing I noticed was that everyone seemed to laugh at my jokes wherever I went.
I think everybody has their own inner rap spirit animal.
Sometimes I want to be completely outlandish and funny, but sometimes I feel the need to prove myself as a rapper.
My whole initial goal was to be a comedian, so it's not like I chose to do a TV show out of nowhere. It's kind of always been goal to do a TV show.
I was a business major at the University of Richmond, and after I graduated, I took a job at a corporate ad agency. I had comedic dreams, but I also had a realistic look at what I had to do when I left school: maybe I'm funny, but maybe I'm one of a hundred thousand funny people, you know?
I'm pretty self-aware, and I am an embarrassingly flawed human being in a ton of ways.
I've been working a lot with Benny Blanco; he's a producer. And I've been working with Diplo and a bunch of other people. Detail, Charlie Handsome. A variety of people.
Love is a fickle thing. But I still believe in it.
I knew I could rap a little bit, which is not the most unique way for being funny. The more I did it, the better I got at rapping, and then I fell in love with the craft of it, and the possibility that I was a good rapper was very intriguing.
I have never been more physically tired than after that first song of my first concert.
Finally, the day came where I put stuff online for the first time ever. The Lil Dicky video got a million views the first day. It was one of the best days of my life. It was the day I learned I was who I thought I was. It was a fantastic I-told-you-so moment.
I spent two years making music in San Francisco for my first mixtape. Initially, I was not at all doing this to be a professional rapper, a touring rapper. I didn't think I had that talent level in me.
I feel like the Philadelphia sports teams are really good at having my back.
Deep down, I always had a belief I would get on the charts.
I don't spend a ton of time interacting, but I feel like I probably do more than most rappers/artists. I just find it interesting to be able to communicate with fans. It's cool.
Deep down, I want to be a big rapper. I want people to love what I'm doing.
People see a 'South Park' episode, and there's racially insensitive jokes - nobody bats an eye because they're expecting that in that context. In hip-hop, they don't expect that kind of thing because it's a white person in a predominantly black world.
It's hard to form actual legitimate relationships.
Obviously, my aspirations are to be considered one of the best. Like, anyone rapping should have that mindset.
I have Kanye's ego to some extent. — © Lil Dicky
I have Kanye's ego to some extent.
Snoop Dogg and T-Pain, to me, are like legends so it's like, any time you get to work with a legend like that, it's cool.
If I apply myself to rap, I'm gonna be the best rapper alive. If I apply myself to comedy, I'm going to be the funniest guy alive.
It is crazy how people can't understand the concept of comedy and music. It's like they have to be mutually exclusive.
The thing is, I was never really a comedian - a comedian would scoff at the notion of me as a comedian because I've never done anything, really. I've always just been some guy who's funny.
One time, I performed 'Save Dat Money' with Justin Bieber. I was at his album release party, and he was like, 'Do you want to do the song?' I was also on a date, so the date met Justin Bieber, and I couldn't have looked cooler.
My fears are never about failure - it's about extreme success.
I can't really rap the way rappers rap; I drive a 2002 Toyota Avalon.
Rapping works like a sport... the more you do it, the better you get at it.
The way you respect hip-hop is by being true to yourself.
A part of me wants to rely less and less on comedic visuals and make more substantial standalone music. And get a sitcom on TV where I can let my comedy do the talking there. — © Lil Dicky
A part of me wants to rely less and less on comedic visuals and make more substantial standalone music. And get a sitcom on TV where I can let my comedy do the talking there.
I think my TV show is gonna be my big thing, so I'm pretty focused on that, and I think doing that will lead to all of the other opportunities I want, to jump to movies and other stuff, but it starts with that.
I remember, in fifth grade, doing a report on the Russian poet Alexander Pushkin as a rap. It was just an easy way to get an A back then because everyone was turning in boring stuff.
My favorite part of festival season is probably the disposable income at hand for me... I get booked for more, and I make more money.
I've always been totally enamored by hip-hop. I wouldn't say I liked it exclusively growing up. It was, like, that and alt-rock. But I always preferred it. It set a tone for everything I wanted to do in life.
'Ex-Boyfriend' is a really funny story that is that much funnier when you have visuals attached to it as opposed to just hearing it. I couldn't let a song like that go un-videoed.
By putting this music out, I think I genuinely eliminated 80 percent of the previous jobs I was qualified for.
I always have to poop right before I do a concert. I don't feel nervous, but I think that must be my body reacting.
You hear a lot of rap songs about spending money. I thought, wouldn't it be funny to make a song about saving money because it's ironic, but beyond irony, I genuinely have pride in saving money.
Like, I haven't even tried a cherry before, because I'm such a picky eater, and I behave like a 9-year-old.
I really don't spend my money that much unless I'm reinvesting in my business.
I always dreamed of being an entertainer. So, my whole life to some extent, or from the age that I can remember onwards, I knew I was going to have to make some sort of attempt at being noticed for being funny.
I would say that I don't make music quickly; like, my process has been very slow, and my bar is very high, and I don't really rush to make music just to get something out there.
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