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Who is Moses Sumney? Emily Ratajkowski flaunts toned body in thong bikini as she embraces hunky singer

Emily Ratajkowski and Moses Sumney who have developed a close friendship have been spotted together on various occasions
PUBLISHED JAN 3, 2023
Moses Sumney was spotted with supermodel Emily Ratajkowski (@emrata/Instagram)
Moses Sumney was spotted with supermodel Emily Ratajkowski (@emrata/Instagram)

CAYMAN ISLAND, LONDON: Emily Ratajkowski was spotted with singer Moses Sumney in a raunchy red thong bikini at the Cayman Islands on Monday, January 2. The supermodel who recently split with Pete Davidson flaunted her abs, cleavage and toned legs as she embraced the hunky singer 

According to Daily Mail, the duo who has developed a close friendship has been spotted together on various occasions. Moses has previously described his sexuality as "fluid" and said he is "not gay but not straight."

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Who is Moses Sumney?



 

Moses Sumney is a 30-year-old Ghanaian-American singer who is famous across various genres of music including indie rock, electro-soul, folk, art rock, and baroque pop. He got popular with some of his music albums, including 'Mid-City Island', 'Aromanticism' and 'Græ'. He was raised by pastor parents in California. He has done his majors in creative writing and studied poetry, as per his Wikipedia profile. Sumney had acted in some of the series, including HBO's 'Random Acts of Flyness' Season 1 Episode 4 and also appeared in the movie 'Creed' and worked on the soundtrack alongside Ludwig Gorannson and Tessa Thompson. His single, 'Me in 20 Years', was featured in a special episode of the HBO drama Euphoria in 2020. Meanwhile, he also released the self-directed music video 'Cut Me' in March 2020 and also released 'Bless Me' as a single from the second part of his album, 'Græ', in May 2020. He had also won the SXSW Film Festival Special Jury Award for his album 'Quarrel'. He was nominated for a Camerimage award and UKMVA. In 2018, he also won the Best Outlier award for Aromanticism under Libera awards. 



 

Moses has also been famous for some of his strong opinions through his interviews. He opined regarding the #MeToo movement in an interview with The Independent, he said, “Men should look on this moment as an opportunity, not a threat. Beyond the oppression, beyond the idea that value came from ruling over others” – which, he adds, he doesn’t connect with – “men are entitled to find what socially responsible worth they have.” In his case, he loves “my stature, my strength and resilience, and my desire to nurture others” – there’s a lot more scope for the still-limited interpretation of masculinity that we have today. “I hope I bring some of that to the conversation. That’s all I can hope for. If I do that, I’m happy.”

In an earlier interview with The Guardian, he has also spoken about his preferred music Genre, he claimed, “I’ve realised that genre doesn’t really matter to me and my work extends past a binary, basically,” he says with a shrug. More than anything, he says he’s referred to as “an R&B artist, which really annoys me. It’s the only [genre label] that feels like a visual identifier as opposed to an aural identifier.” He had also explained how he identify himself as a black artist in the industry, “I find reflexively the need to be different in some way as a black artist, to try to shift the narrative of what a Black man can be stereotypically and present an alternative,” he says. “And it’s a very negative urge to have. He added, “One of the many manifestations of social oppression is the idea that you have to prove that you’re one of the good ones, in order for humanity to be extended to you and people that look like you. Whereas I don’t have to prove anything and it should be OK to be anything. It should be OK to fit into the stereotype and it should be OK to not fit into the stereotype.”

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