TAMPA — Doechii rolled onstage Saturday night atop a wheeled desk, rocking a pinstripe mini skirt and ready to school us all.

She peered at the packed Yuengling Center crowd through a pair of sexy-nerdy Bayonetta glasses. A school bell rang out, smothered by cheers of her friends, family and fans. Then Doechii crawled on top of the desk and started to twerk.

Before she was a Grammy-winning rapper, Jaylah Ji’mya Hickmon was a Tampa girl fervently studying the art of hip-hop. This has become part of her brand. On Saturday, fans arrived in every marshy shade of green and brown, rocking reptile-skin purses and alligator onesies. Many were following Doechii’s aesthetic of school uniform-inspired streetwear, rocking pleated skirts and sweater vests, layering wide neckties over sports bras and knee socks under high-heeled loafers. The rapper told Vogue last year that her academia-chic outfits are a nod to all of her music research.

But now, as Doechii, 27, returned to play a packed hometown show during her Live From the Swamp Tour, things are different. This was the first show back after her breakout season, and the performer had a lot to catch us up on since she opened for Doja Cat at Amalie Arena two years back. Midway through the song “Alter Ego,” Doechii sampled the audio of her own meltdown outside at the 2025 Met Gala, a now-viral moment of panic as she yelled for more umbrellas to hide her outfit.

She transformed her chart-topping hit “Anxiety” (a riff on Gotye’s “Somebody That I Used to Know”) into a haunted punk-rock riot, complete with searing guitar riffs and flashing red lights.

And she towered on top of the jumbo boombox that swallowed up most of her stage, whipping a pointer stick to punctuate each line of her cocky post-Grammy freestyle “Nosebleeds.”

“I hopped out the swamp, gave the b—- props. ‘Doechii, where you been? Doechii went pop,’” she rapped. “‘Will she ever lose?’ Man, I guess we’ll never know.”

Hip-hop’s most studious pupil now reigned as professor.

“Tampa, how are you feeling tonight?” Doechii asked. “Are you students doing OK?”

By now, the world knows how hard Doechii has trained to fill arenas like this. How she learned to rap and dance and sing as a student at the arts magnet program of Howard W. Blake High School. What it took to manifest success during those long nights performing in Ybor City clubs and bars.

You could see it pay off in every bit of choreography, the rapper flanked by her twin sisters-turned-backup dancers. It’s not enough that she wrote and performed the songs. Doechii drove the bars home with athletic stunts, popping down into bouncing splits, duckwalking across the stage like a vogueing drag queen and sprinting up a playground slide — in heels.

She made sure every person could follow along on the screens behind her, shaking her butt so close to the camera that even people in the nosebleeds could count the runs in her dance tights.

Ever since Doechii left Florida to pursue her dreams, she’s dedicated a slice of every magazine interview, television appearance and award show to repping her hometown. In her Grammy acceptance speech this February, she urged labels to look for rising talent in Tampa.

Her sole opener took the stage at 8:45 p.m. Would it be one of those local stars?

Out swaggered Kal Banx, Doechii’s Top Dawg Entertainment label mate. A dude from Dallas, Texas.

While performing songs off his debut album, Banx shared the same brand of vulnerable lyricism that made Doechii so popular in the first place. He rapped about his mother’s death, his homesickness and the friends who propped him up through it all. Banx paced the stage, explaining each song like a hip-hop pastor.

“I went to therapy, so make some noise for therapy,” said Banx, traveling the country on his first tour. “I discovered I had a lot of anxiety.”

Later he proclaimed Tampa — a “freaky a– city” — as the best stop of the whole tour.

Doechii barreled onstage at 10 p.m., firing off a rapid succession of songs from her Grammy-winning mixtape “Alligator Bites Never Heal.” As the set progressed, she peeled back the braggadocious shell of newfound stardom, revealing the sensitive Florida girl still underneath.

In “Swamp B—–,” she rapped over a murky beat that thumped like a sweaty pulse. Doechii lamented about “makin’ Tiktok music” in “Denial is a River,” ping-ponging lyrics with hype-woman DJ Miss Milan. She retraced her perilously horny adolescence during “Yucky Blucky Fruitcake.” The track still reminds Doechii of pandemic-era Tampa.

“Florida just refused to listen and just stayed outside,” she remembered with a laugh.

Doechii finally slowed it down for “Stressed,” crooning into a microphone over the ribcage-rattling bass. In one of the rare moments where she was still, the crowd began to roar.

“I haven’t been home in a while and I missed you guys so much. Wait, is that the Blake High School band?” she asked, pointing to a row of cheering students in the back of the arena. “Let me get a Blake! Blake! Blake!”

The marching band stomped their feet and hollered, the vibrations clattering across the arena. The students had performed earlier that evening at a pre-concert pop-up outside the venue. Later, some would keep the chant going in the parking lot.

Near the front of the stage, fans sweated to keep up with their Swamp Princess. Doechii commanded the VIPs on the floor to open up the pit so she could wriggle in and mosh during “Pacer.” She slipped into the sea of waving hands, disappearing under flashing lights.

She emerged for “Nissan Altima,” passing the microphone around the audience and hopping in glee as her fans took turns rapping her lines.

“I love you guys so much. I feel so much gratitude in this moment,” she said, perched atop her slowly rolling desk. “I traveled all over the world, to so many places, and I’ve seen so many audiences. And none of them feel like my home like Tampa Bay.”

STANKA POOH

BULLFROG

BOILED PEANUTS

NISSAN ALTIMA

AMERICA HAS A PROBLEM (Beyoncé cover)

Booty Drop

ExtraL (JENNIE collab)

Alter Ego

Persuasive

SLIDE

Spookie Coochie

Nosebleeds

Crazy

Anxiety (rock instrumental)

Stressed

DEATH ROLL

BOOM BAP

GTFO

CATFISH

Swamp Bitches

DENIAL IS A RIVER

Balloon (Tyler, The Creator collab)

WAIT (including “Human Nature” by Michael Jackson)

Encore:

Yucky Blucky Fruitcake

PACER

NISSAN ALTIMA