Lizzo made a surprise appearance during Paris Hilton’s DJ set at Stagecoach Festival to perform her hit ‘Truth Hurts’ – watch below.
Hilton was playing on the Diplo Honky Tonk Stage at the Indio, California festival on Friday (April 25) when she welcomed Lizzo to join her – the singer walked out onto the stage accompanied by her recent single ‘Still Bad’.
They then kicked into ‘Truth Hurts’, from Lizzo’s breakout album ‘Cuz I Love You’ in 2019. Watch footage from the impromptu performance here, as well as pics of the two women hanging out backstage with Hollywood star Sydney Sweeney:
@stagecoach Stagecoach sliving @ParisHilton @lizzo #stagecoach #country Watch the @Amazon Music livestream, only on @Prime Video and Amazon Music’s Twitch channel.
♬ original sound – stagecoach
Paris Hilton brings out Lizzo at Stagecoach✨☺️ pic.twitter.com/YduuEoQ1WR
— MuchMusic (@Much) April 26, 2025
The queen of #RHOBH, Kyle Richards, with Lizzo, Paris Hilton, and Sydney Sweeney at Stagecoach looking 🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/CxsCzWi5WJ
— Queens of Bravo (@queensofbravo) April 27, 2025
Earlier this month, Lizzo was the musical guest on Saturday Night Live, where she played a medley of ‘Still Bad’ and ‘Love In Real Life’, the latter being the title track of her upcoming fifth studio album. In March, she said the record was “finished”, and it is likely also to include ‘Don’t Make Me Love You’, which she also played on SNL.
Lizzo has explained how she came up with the album title, saying that it came about after she realised how much more integral real-life friendships are compared to those made through social media.
“I think that real life is the only place that love exists,” she said. “I think that I have mistaken the gratification that you get from social media as love. Because there was a time [where] I wasn’t reaching out to the people who were closest to me or I was in isolation, in desolation, in certain times of my life. The internet was the only place I felt seen and appreciated.”
“I think when it stops becoming that safe space and it becomes a very toxic, destructive place, your sense of self-worth gets destroyed as well,” she added. “I had to discover in the past two years, one and a half years, that as good as it feels to be praised online and to be loved by people through a screen, the real love happens when you are in the real world connecting with people.”
These comments come after Lizzo broke her silence in December on the sexual harassment lawsuit filed against her in 2023, claiming that she “did nothing wrong”. She had been sued by three former dancers who claimed to have been subject to sexual harassment and a hostile workplace environment while on tour. The singer denied the claims and said the situation had left her contemplating quitting the music industry.
Elsewhere, Lizzo celebrated reaching her “weight release” goals earlier this year, telling her followers: “Let this be a reminder you can do anything you put your mind to.”