Hold up—OutKast’s timeless plea, “I’m sorry, Ms. Jackson, I am for real,” might not be the personal shout-out to Erykah Badu that fans have long assumed — but her mother’s not so sure.

During a recent interview with The New York Times, the 54-year-old neo-soul legend cast doubt on the connection.

When host Joe Coscarelli praised the track as part of the “great hip-hop” inspired by her, Badu pushed back: “I don’t think ‘Ms. Jackson’ was actually about me. I don’t think so, but people say it.”

Was ‘Ms. Jackson’ About Erykah Badu? Singer Has Doubts

With a laugh, she pivoted to her mom, Kolleen Gipson, quipping, “Well, she thinks it was about her. She’s got the bumper sticker and the airbrush T-shirt.”

“Dropping on this very day 25 years ago—October 24, 2000—”Ms. Jackson” was the second single from OutKast’s groundbreaking album Stankonia.

The Atlanta duo’s heartfelt track skyrocketed to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, snagged a Grammy for Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group, and cemented its status as an early-2000s anthem of regret and reconciliation.

For years, listeners have tied the song’s narrative—a young father’s awkward olive branch to his ex’s disapproving mom—to Badu’s own life.

She and OutKast’s André 3000 (born André Benjamin) shared a romance from 1995 to 1999, co-parenting their son, Seven Sirius Benjamin, born in 1997.

Their split came just before Stankonia’s release, fueling theories that the lyrics were André’s coded mea culpa to the Badu clan.André has owned up to pulling from his own relational ups and downs for the song’s raw emotion.

Still, he and partner-in-rhyme Big Boi (Antwan Patton) have repeatedly clarified: It’s not that specific. No Badu, no Gipson—just universal baby-mama drama turned into hip-hop gold.