BbyMutha

[5] After physically assaulting a teacher at her school, Moore was committed to a psychiatric ward, where she was diagnosed with depression and ADHD.

[5] She began writing poetry in fourth grade,[6] and became interested in music and performance after participating and winning a dance competition with her cousins in elementary school.

The name was inspired by her experience of being called a "baby mama" by the other female partner of her unfaithful boyfriend.

[4] After working in retail and in call centers for several years,[2] she became pregnant with her second pair of twins, Khloe and Tyler, after moving to Nashville to study fashion design.

[5] After giving birth to her second pair of twins, Moore moved back to Chattanooga[5] and returned to rapping.

[2] The video went viral, and led to Moore to receive attention from prominent R&B musicians SZA and Kehlani.

[17] "Indian Hair", a track from Moore's 2015 EP, Weave, featured in the soundtrack to the second season of Netflix series Dear White People.

[18] On August 28, 2020, after years of delays, her debut studio album, Muthaland, was finally released on music distribution platforms.

Declaring it her last official release, she expressed her frustrations via Twitter with the process behind making the album, adding how much stress it caused her.

[19] The album received positive reviews from music publications, with critics praising the lyrics and creativity.

Pitchfork scored the album an 8.0 rating, with contributor Dylan Green writing "It's a deliriously entertaining, ambitious project from an artist operating at her peak".

In addition, she also plans to open a physical brick-and-mortar store for the company, while also focusing on possibly releasing a mini-EP to be made exclusively available on OnlyFans, and a documentary.

[5] She has also listed Southern hip hop artists Trina, La Chat, and Gangsta Boo as influences.