GloRilla is asking a judge to dismiss a copyright lawsuit filed against her by a New Orleans bounce artist and influencer who claims the Tennessee rapper stole the phrase "No BBL" on the Glorious album track "Never Find."On Monday (Sept. 8), Glo's legal team fired back at the lawsuit, which was filed back in June by Natalie Henderson, known as slimdabodylast on social media. Henderson claims she coined the phrase "all naturale, no BBL" and used the motto on her single "All Natural," released last May, where she raps "All naturale, no BBL/Mad h*es go to hell." She alleges Glo swiped the tagline on the November of 2024 track "Never Find," where Glo rhymes, "Natural, no BBL/But I'm still gon' give ’em hell."Glo's attorneys argued the case should be thrown out for multiple reasons, including Henderson failing to prove that Glo had knowledge of her track in the first place and the phrase "natural, no BBL" not being copyrightable."The phrase 'natural[e], no BBL'—referring to a person with a natural body who has not undergone the 'Brazilian Butt Lift' cosmetic procedure—is too 'common,' 'everyday,' 'trite' and 'cliched' to be protectable by copyright," the court filing reads.The judge has yet to make a ruling on the case. XXL has reached out to GloRilla's attorney for comment.