Watch Ariana Grande Shut Down Sexist Bros Who Ask Her Tone-Deaf Questions

Go, girl.

Ariana Grande was having none of it during a recent radio interview where two male hosts asked her a series of sexist, stereotypical questions. 

On Thursday, the singer made an appearance at Power 106, where she was promoting her latest single, "Focus."Around the 16-minute mark in the video above, hosts Justin Credible and Eric D-Lux asked Grande what she would choose if she could only use makeup or her cellphone one last time. 

"Is this what you think girls have trouble choosing between?" Grande replied. "Is this men assuming that that's what girls would have to choose between?"

Grande was clearly unamused, but it seems the interviewers couldn't take the hint. When the conversation shifted over to her favorite new emojis, the hosts inexplicably insisted that real men don't use unicorn emojis. 

"You need a little brushing up on equality, over here," Grande said. 

When the DJs asked Grande what one problem she would fix in the world, her answer was perfect: 

"I have a long list of things I'd like to change. Judgement, intolerance, meanness, double standards, misogyny, racism, sexism... We've got work to do." 

Donut-gate aside, Grande remains passionate and vocal about sexism, especially within the music industry. In June, she called out the way the media defines women by who they date.

"I can't wait to live in a world where people are not valued by who they're dating/married to/attached to, having sex with (or not)/seen with," she wrote, "but by their value as an individual."

H/T Mic

Also on HuffPost:

Ariana Grande's Style Evolution
October 2008(01 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Jim Spellman via Getty Images)
October 2009(02 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Gregg DeGuire via Getty Images)
2009(03 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
March 2010(04 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
March 2010(05 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
April 2010(06 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Andrew H. Walker via Getty Images)
May 2010(07 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
June 2010(08 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
June 2010(09 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
June 2010(10 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
October 2010(11 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
October 2010(12 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Amy Sussman via Getty Images)
February 2011(13 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
February 2011(14 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
April 2011(15 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
June 2011(16 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
July 2011(17 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
August 2011(18 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
September 2011(19 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
September 2011(20 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
September 2011(21 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
September 2011(22 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
October 2011(23 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
December 2011(24 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
March 2012(25 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
March 2012(26 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Getty)
May 2012(27 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:JB Lacroix via Getty Images)
September 2012(28 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Michael Tran via Getty Images)
November 2012(29 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Imeh Akpanudosen via Getty Images)
December 2012(30 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Imeh Akpanudosen via Getty Images)
October 2013(31 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Ben A. Pruchnie via Getty Images)
November 2013(32 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Dave Hogan/MTV 2013 via Getty Images)
November 2013(33 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Kevin Mazur/AMA2013 via Getty Images)
December 2013(34 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Kevin Mazur via Getty Images)
December 2013(35 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Paul Warner via Getty Images)
December 2013(36 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Uri Schanker via Getty Images)
March 2014(37 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Steve Granitz via Getty Images)
May 2014(38 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Axelle/Bauer-Griffin via Getty Images)
July 2014(39 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Jamie McCarthy via Getty Images)
August 2014(40 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:NBC NewsWire via Getty Images)
August 2014(41 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Jason Merritt via Getty Images)
August 2014(42 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Kevin Winter via Getty Images)
September 2014(43 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Jun Sato via Getty Images)
September 2014(44 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Jun Sato via Getty Images)
September 2014(45 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:David Becker via Getty Images)
October 2014(46 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Neil P. Mockford via Getty Images)
October 2014(47 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Neil Mockford/Alex Huckle via Getty Images)
February 2015(48 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Mario Anzuoni / Reuters)
November 2015(49 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:David McNew / Reuters)
February 2016(50 of61)
Open Image Modal
Singer Ariana Grande arrives at the 58th Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, California February 15, 2016. REUTERS/Danny Moloshok (credit:Danny Moloshok / Reuters)
August 2016(51 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Eduardo Munoz / Reuters)
August 2016(52 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Lucas Jackson / Reuters)
November 2016(53 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Danny Moloshok / Reuters)
June 2017(54 of61)
Open Image Modal
MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - JUNE 04: Ariana Grande performs on stage during the One Love Manchester Benefit Concert at Old Trafford on June 4, 2017 in Manchester, England. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/One Love Manchester/Getty Images for One Love Manchester) (credit:Kevin Mazur/One Love Manchester via Getty Images)
September 2017(55 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Kevin Mazur via Getty Images)
March 2018(56 of61)
Open Image Modal
Singer Ariana Grande performs the song "Be Alright" as students and gun control advocates hold the "March for Our Lives" event demanding gun control after recent school shootings at a rally in Washington, U.S., March 24, 2018. REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein (credit:Aaron Bernstein / Reuters)
May 2018(57 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Jeff Kravitz via Getty Images)
May 2018(58 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Carlo Allegri / Reuters)
June 2018(59 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Gotham via Getty Images)
June 2018(60 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Kevin Mazur via Getty Images)
July 2018(61 of61)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Raymond Hall via Getty Images)

Our 2024 Coverage Needs You

As Americans head to the polls in 2024, the very future of our country is at stake. At HuffPost, we believe that a free press is critical to creating well-informed voters. That's why our journalism is free for everyone, even though other newsrooms retreat behind expensive paywalls.

Our journalists will continue to cover the twists and turns during this historic presidential election. With your help, we'll bring you hard-hitting investigations, well-researched analysis and timely takes you can't find elsewhere. Reporting in this current political climate is a responsibility we do not take lightly, and we thank you for your support.

to keep our news free for all.

Support HuffPost