Most people would take more than a week off after being shot. Offset is not most people.Just six days after being wounded near the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Florida, the former Migos member had already flown across the country to Los Angeles, performed live on stage, and sat down for a full interview on The Creators Inc. Podcast. When host Andy Bachman pointed out the sheer pace of his recovery, Offset had a simple explanation for it. He compared himself to the Energizer Bunny, something that just keeps going regardless of what gets thrown at it.
He made clear that slowing down was simply not something he planned to do.
Offset and the flight that made it all possible
The logistics of getting from Florida to California less than a week after a shooting required some creative thinking. Offset described arranging a private jet with a bed onboard, explaining that lying flat for six hours and arriving rested was all it took to make the cross-country trip manageable. It was a practical solution delivered with the kind of matter-of-fact calm that suggested he had already moved on mentally long before his body had fully caught up.
That attitude carried through the rest of the conversation. When Bachman pressed further, Offset acknowledged the incident without dwelling on it, describing the situation as being in the wrong place at the wrong time. He expressed no desire for sympathy and instead pointed to something broader, noting that people face gunfire every day and that his experience, while serious, was not something he intended to let define him or his momentum.
Offset’s message after the shooting
The rapper had already signaled his mindset publicly before the podcast even aired. Four days after the incident, he posted a message to social media telling fans he was recovering and focused on what mattered most, citing his family, his health, and his return to music. He framed the experience in terms of perspective rather than pain, describing life as a series of quiet victories and loud setbacks.
He ended the message with a declaration that he was still in the game and playing to win.
Offset and the grind that never stopped
What stands out about Offset’s response is not just the speed of his recovery but the tone of it. There is no performance of toughness here, no dramatic narrative being constructed around the moment. Instead, there is something quieter at work a genuine refusal to let a frightening event become the loudest thing in the room.
He showed up to the stage. He showed up to the interview. He talked about it plainly and then moved the conversation forward.
For an artist who has faced significant personal losses in recent years, the Energizer Bunny comparison lands as more than just a quip. It reads like a philosophy. Keep moving. Stay focused. Do not stop.
The grind, as Offset put it, does not stop. And judging by the last six days of his life, he means it entirely.

