Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
Free shipping on all orders
The onomatopoeia, “whoo,” often expresses excitement or signifies a hot temperature. Offset told The Breakfast Club that when he heard the beat drop, he couldn’t contain himself. He played back the sounds and decided to keep them. Interestingly, Offset would go on to adapt this as his signature sound. On his 2017 track, “Ric Flair Drip,” he seems to attribute its origin to Ric Flair: Ric Flair drip, go “woo” on a bitch (woo)