Malia and Sasha Obama Were Spotted Partying With Drake — and the Internet Is Losing Its Mind

Years after Barack Obama jokingly said Drake could play him in a biopic because the rapper “can do anything,” the Canadian superstar ended up sharing a very different scene with the former president’s daughters.

Late one night in Los Angeles, Drake was seen partying with Malia and Sasha Obama — two women America watched grow up in matching coats and hair bows, who are now fully stepped into adulthood and living far from the shadow of Washington.

And yes, the internet exploded.

From White House Kids to L.A. Women

Malia (born July 4, 1998) and Sasha (born June 10, 2001) entered the White House as children and left as young adults who had survived the most public upbringing imaginable. Michelle Obama has often spoken about the tightrope they walked: being polite, being composed, being watched. Always watched.

“They had to learn to handle attention they didn’t ask for,” she said. And she never let them believe the White House bubble was permanent: “You’re not going to live here with me forever.”

Barack Obama once admitted how surreal it felt to see Malia head off to prom. “The first time you see your daughter in heels… it’s a little bit jarring,” he said before softening into every dad’s truth: “She’s lovely. She’s beautiful.”

Malia: The Emerging Filmmaker

After a gap year, internships, and work on TV sets, Malia graduated from Harvard in 2021. She wrote for Amazon’s Swarm and in 2024 debuted her short film Heart at Sundance — under her professional name Malia Ann.

Not as a former First Daughter.
Not as a political figure.
But as a creator.

Sasha: The Social, Sharp, LA-Dwelling Comedian of the Family

Sasha attended the University of Michigan before transferring to USC, where she graduated with a sociology degree in 2023. She’s funny, confident, and has quietly carved out her own Los Angeles life — no spotlight required.

Sisters, Roommates, and Each Other’s Safe Place

The two share a home in L.A. Michelle Obama confessed this brings her peace: “It feels good to know that the two girls you raised find solace at a kitchen table with one another.”

They cook. They bicker. They borrow clothes. They live like any siblings who’ve survived something enormous together.

Then Came That Night Out With Drake

Recently, the sisters were spotted at The Bird Streets Club, one of Hollywood’s trendiest late-night destinations. Drake — performing in L.A. for his It’s All A Blur—Big As The What? tour — was also there.

In the VIP section, the three were seen laughing, talking, dancing — just adults in the same room, enjoying the same night.

But symbolically? It hit different.

These weren’t the protected White House girls anymore.
They were women.

The Fashion Moment

Sasha Obama stunned in a black corset, cargo pants, high ponytail, and heels — relaxed, radiant, unmistakably in her era.

Malia Obama wore a lace-up sheer top with printed trousers and chunky boots, her long hair flowing freely. Effortless. Cool. A far cry from the structured dresses of state dinners.

They reportedly stayed until 4 a.m. and left with friends shortly after Drake slipped out a side exit.

Classic L.A.

The Reaction Online? Predictably Chaotic

Some people were shocked.
Some were amused.
Some were proud.

But all agreed on one thing: time flies.

A Reminder: The Obama Daughters Are No Longer Symbols — They’re Adults

People rushed to joke about Drake “doing research” for the Obama biopic role he once joked about, but the real story isn’t about celebrity gossip at all.

It’s about two women who:

grew up under intense national scrutiny,

never chose the spotlight,

and are now building their own lives, their own work, their own identities — on their own terms.

The photos from that night didn’t just capture a moment at a club. They captured a transformation.

Malia and Sasha Obama aren’t political footnotes.
They aren’t children.
They’re adults living boldly, freely, and authentically — exactly how they were raised to.

Barack once said raising them was the greatest honor of his life.

Nights like this prove he and Michelle didn’t just raise daughters.
They raised women who know how to stand firmly in their own story.

And in Los Angeles… that’s everything.

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