C
Celeb Spill Daily

The “Clean” Version of ‘WAP’ Is Actually So Much Filthier

Author

David Schmidt

Published Apr 03, 2026

Tell me this isn’t dirtier if you’re imagining the word gushy.

I woke up this morning and waited patiently for my family’s much-loved babysitter to come so I could hide in a room by myself and watch the new Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion video for “WAP.” I’d been on Twitter already; I knew what WAP stands for. So I also knew this was not a video I really wanted to have a long chat about with my 6- and 3-year-olds before breakfast.

When the time finally came, I put my headphones in and hit “play,” prepared to watch them nail that “wet-ass pussy” chorus in their fantasy palace of butt statues and snakes. I was prepped! Imagine my surprise, then, when the chorus I heard over and over, the supposedly “clean” version they’d recorded for radio and for the music video, was actually so much dirtier than “wet-ass pussy.” Because in the clean version, it’s not “wet-ass pussy.” It’s “wet and gushy.” And I am here to tell you that “wet and gushy” is, in fact, a much, much nastier version of this song.

On the face of it, sure, “wet-ass pussy” seems more explicit. It has both ass and pussy, words anyone’s middle-school teacher would scold you for saying in class. No one’s getting sent to the principal’s office for the word and. As a whole phrase, though, you will never convince me that “wet-ass pussy” is dirtier than “wet and gushy.” First, while “wet-ass pussy” is more anatomically specific, it lacks action. The wetness of the pussy in that image is already a fait accompli. It’s there, available; it’s a plain, clearly stated fact.

Meanwhile, every ounce of obscenity in the clean version comes from the word gushy. Where “wet-ass pussy” is a primed but inert sexual organ, gushy comes with some built-in action. The combination of wet and gushy gives the image an additional sense of motion, and it’s much more detailed in a sensory way. Nothing gushes passively. Nothing that gushes is controlled or manageable — the whole idea of the word is uncontrolled excess. The phrase is also just a touch less direct. “Wet-ass pussy” leaves nothing to the imagination, but “wet and gushy” is oblique enough that it feels much more evocative.

I’ve now listened to both the “clean” and “dirty” versions a few times, and I do think “wet-ass pussy” works better as a chorus. The sounds in each word are more percussive, and there’s a rhythmic precision you’ll just never get with the sloppy, soft sounds in the word gushy. But if the aim of the song is to make “wet-ass pussy” a proudly, gloriously, heinously filthy phrase that really sinks into the cultural lexicon, then trust me: “Wet and gushy” has the filthiness crown.

More From This Series

See All The ‘Clean’ Version of ‘WAP’ Is Actually So Much Filthier