MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. – Minneapolis Public School District officials contend they were “tremendously misled” by a former student turned self-proclaimed rap star who rented the gymnasium at Patrick Henry High School last month for a raunchy profanity-laced music video.

Rapper P Skud, a 26-year-old who was known by his real name Lavern Jamison when he attended the school, paid $12,000 to produce a music video at Patrick Henry on Nov. 20 that featured Jamison with his pants falling down and scantily clad “cheerleaders” gyrating in a packed gymnasium during a basketball scrimmage.

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Jamison and Chicago-based rapper Lil Bibby paid $300 to rent the school’s gym for what they described as a “basketball promotion,” school officials told the Minneapolis Star-Tribune.

The “Keep Me Going” rap video features lyrics about drugs, “drank,” money, “bitches,” “wildin’,” sex, and violence, City Pages reports.

The little ditty includes the lines:

“Pop me a pill, and you know it’s potent”

“Thot bitches so you know they rollin”

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“If I go broke I kick a door in/ Ain’t wifin’ these bitches they too annoying”

“Money will keep me going/ Drank will keep me going”

“My niggas wildin’ will keep me going”

School officials told the Tribune a janitor checked the crew’s permit and let them in on a Sunday afternoon, then returned two hours later to lock up. The district was unaware of the video until it was already on YouTube, where it’s racked up more than 50,000 views.

“Clearly, a basketball promotion was a misrepresentation,” district spokeswoman Gail Plewacki said. “We were tremendously misled.”

She said the video’s lyrics and images “do not align with our values.”

“We do not endorse the content, and we do not approve of the content,” Plewacki said.

Patrick Henry Principal Yusuf Abdullah the producers of the video, Chicago-based A Zae Production, remove it from YouTube because it violates the lease agreement by showing the school’s name, but the production company has so far refused.

Jamison told the Tribune he made the video to “motive (his) little brother” – a basketball player at Osseo High School – to “never stop, to keep going.”

The rapper said he chose the Patrick Henry for the video because he loved the three years he spent there before moving on to graduate somewhere else.

“I used to perform at Henry in talent shows,” he said.