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TL;DR
"Skool lil baby" is a misspelled or partial search for either Lil Baby's track "Old Skool" (with Rylo Rodriguez, off the deluxe edition of My Turn, 2020) or his broader catalogue. There is no Lil Baby content on skool.com that we know of — Skool is a community platform creators use to run paid memberships, not a music distribution service. If you wanted the song, search "Lil Baby Old Skool" on your streaming service. If you wanted the platform skool.com, the rest of this site has guides on pricing, alternatives, and tools that automate it (including tools4skool, the extension we make).

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The music side: Lil Baby and "Old Skool"
Lil Baby (Dominique Jones, born 1994 in Atlanta) is one of the most-streamed rappers of the late 2010s and 2020s. "Old Skool" appears on the deluxe edition of his second studio album, My Turn, released in 2020. The track features Rylo Rodriguez and references classic-rap influences — that's where the "old skool" spelling comes from, the deliberate misspelling of "old school" common in hip-hop branding (think Run-DMC's "Old School" tributes, or even "OutKast" using K). If you arrived here looking for a tracklist or lyrics, Genius and Apple Music both have full credits. Streaming numbers as of writing are well into the tens of millions on Spotify and YouTube combined.
The platform side: skool.com
Skool (skool.com) is an online community platform where creators run paid memberships, courses, and discussion forums under one roof. It launched in 2019 and grew quickly after Alex Hormozi invested in 2023. Pricing is flat at $99 per month per community, regardless of size. Members get a feed, a classroom, a leaderboard, and chat-style DMs. Creators use Skool to sell access to mastermind groups, coaching programs, fitness communities, and online courses. There is no music feed, no streaming, no Lil Baby content. If you're confused — totally fair, the spelling is identical — but the two are unrelated.
Why these two collide in search
Two reasons. First, search engines are loose with phonetic matches: "skool" can pull "school" and vice versa, and "old skool" is a common stylized spelling in music titles, brand names, and slang. Second, the platform skool.com is searched heavily for things like "skool community," "skool pricing," "skool login" — so any "skool + word" combo that looks like a brand or person ends up indexed even when the connection is thin. If you're a creator running a hip-hop fan community, you could host one on Skool — and many do — but that's the user-generated layer, not Skool itself programming Lil Baby content. If you want to run that kind of community and you're tired of doing welcome DMs and churn saves by hand, tools4skool layers automation on top of Skool so the daily admin work runs itself.
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