Boosie Badazz has showcased his unconventional cooking skills in a new clip this week — and fans have been left baffled and concerned.

On Thursday (July 6), The Neighborhood Talk captured a clip of the controversial rapper from his Instagram Live, where he throws down in the kitchen as he prepares lasagna.

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Fans appeared to be on board with Lil Boosie’s efforts until he switched out shredded cheese for what appeared to be Kraft Singles. “I was going to say yes until he added that square cheese (crying emoji),” wrote one user.

“Is that slice cheese he puttin there? That’s a setup not lasagna,” commented another.

When he’s not in the kitchen, channeling his inner top chef, the Baton Rouge, Louisiana-born rapper is busy making a splash in the music industry — more specifically, the world of afrobeats.

On Tuesday (July 4), Boosie took to Twitter to call upon American-Nigerian hitmakerDavido, who dropped off his fourth studio album Timeless back in March, to pause his current tour and help him out with his new Bad Azz Music Syndicate signees.

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“@davido bro I need you to call me ASAP! I just signed the hottest DUO Afro beats artists, too hard! Get my number from @DaBabyDaBaby !! I NEED YOU!!” he wrote.

Considering Davido’s long list of American collaborators — including Young Thug,Nicki Minaj,Gunna, and A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie — he may just be the right person to lend a helping hand to Boosie.

Boosie Badazz Pleads With Mark Zuckerberg To Lift Instagram Ban: ‘I’ve Been Doing Good’

Boosie would be just the latest rapper to dive into Afrobeats. Snoop Dogg recently linked up with the popular international genre’s newest star CuhDeeJah for the new bouncy summertime single, “Bad Mama Jama.”

However, not everyone is on board with rap and Afrobeats fusing together. Lil Duval aired out the genre in February, and said it could lead to the “death of Hip Hop.”

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“afrobeats might be the death of hip hop as we know it,” Duval began on Twitter – which was met with a lot pushback. He quickly followed up with another tweet to explain he wasn’t saying it as a diss.

“I wasn’t saying hip hop is over i said ‘hip hop as we know it’ meaning like evolved into something bigger,” he clarified. “Meaning giving afrobeats props. I don’t [know] how some took offense.”