Instead of the chair offered when she sat for an interview on the “The Breakfast Club” radio show, she sued Lyft because her weight requested a sofa, and her weight requested a sofa. Rapper.
Describing herself as “obese” and “big beautiful woman,” Dunk Demos walked to a studio in New York City, sitting in a wheeled office chair before the interview began, quickly becoming uncomfortable. I saw it and let the crew know about it.
“Is this the only seat?” Demos, who also attends Dajua Branding, asks seriously.
Host Charlamagne Tar and others pulled the couches for the people from Detroit.
“This is what I'm talking about. Good. This is accommodation,” she said thankfully while sitting.
Demos previously said she weighed around 489 pounds, but after she posted a video on social media, the Lyft driver pulled up on his Mercedes-Benz sedan, and soon It went viral after posting a video showing him locking his door.
“I can fit this car,” she assured him.
“Believe me, you can't,” the driver said his name was Ibrahim and canceled her ride.
While discussing the incident in “The Breakfast Club,” she explained that she must adapt in many situations due to her weight, but understands when people don't want to help her deal with her. Not done.
When asked why people have to deal with her, she simply retorted, “Why not?”
“Large people should be housed just like we are dealing with the LGBT community,” Demos added.
She hit Lyft in the lawsuit last month.
A Lyft spokesman told the Post that the company could not comment on the specific cases in which it was caught up in the lawsuit, but it condemned discrimination.
“Lyft clearly condemns all forms of discrimination. We believe in a community where everyone is treated with equal respect and mutual kindness,” the spokesman said.
