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Kodak Black Pleads Guilty To Sexual Assault; 10-Year Prison Sentence Suspended

Rap star Kodak Black has reached a plea deal for sexually assaulting a high school student.

The rapper was in court today (April 28th) in Florence, South Carolina over a February 2016 incident when he was 21-years-old.

A girl claimed Kodak raped her in a hotel room after his performance at the Treasure City Nightclub in Florence in February of 2016. The girl, who was not a minor when the crime occurred, said Kodak forced her onto a bed at the Comfort Inn and Suites and committed sexual battery.

The girl maintained Kodak forced her to have sex, even though she allegedly told him no, and to stop.

The girl also said Kodak bit her on the neck and her right breast, injuries that were revealed when she reported the alleged attack to a nurse at Richmond County High School.

Kodak was eventually indicted for first-degree criminal sexual conduct. He was released from the Florence County Detention Center in November of 2016 after posting a $100,000 bond.

The rap star pleaded guilty to first-degree assault and battery.

Kodak was facing up to 30 years, although the plea agreement spared him from a lengthier prison sentence.

The rapper was hit with a 10-year sentence, which was suspended for 18 months of probation. He Must also undergo counseling.

And, Kodak Black acknowledged his guilt and apologized to the victim during his court hearing.

In January of 2021, Kodak Black, real name Bill K. Kapri, was released from a 3-year prison sentence for lying on a federal application to purchase guns.

The rap star caught a life-changing break after Donald Trump pardoned him on his last day in office as POTUS.

DJ Khaled Reveals Tracklist For Star-Studded 12th Album “Khaled Khaled”

DJ Khaled will release his 12th album Khaled Khaled on Friday (April 30th).

The star took to Twitter to confirm the long-awaited collection will drop by the end of the week via We the Best Music, Epic and Roc Nation.

“ALBUM 100% DONE! ITS TIME,” penned the star, along with the cover art for the record. “I TOLD MY TEAM LETS PUSH THE BUTTON!”

He added, “This my name. This is my legacy. This my COVER. Time to bring MORE LIGHT.”

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A post shared by DJ KHALED (@djkhaled)

The album was executive produced by Asahd and Aalam Khaled, the musician’s kids, and the duo also appear on the album cover alongside their dad.

Jay-Z, Nas, Meek Mill, Justin Bieber, Post Malone and Justin Timberlake are among the artists who have contributed to the LP.

“I have a gift for the world. I can’t wait to share it with you…I’m going make one more call for last min magic,” DJ Khaled said revealing a last-minute surprise collaboration which will be announced for the album today.

Khaled Khaled comes two years after his last album, Father of Asahd, which dropped in 2019.

Check out the tracklist:

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A post shared by DJ KHALED (@djkhaled)

Paid Pat On Getting The Waka Flocka Cosign & New Visual “Bankroll”

Paid Pat is the next hottest artist to come out of Memphis, Orange Mound to be exact.

With his grandmother raising him, an illness resulted in a young Paid Pat finding himself at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, where he became engulfed in the music of 2 Chainz and Lil Wayne. From that point on, he knew exactly that he wanted this lifestyle for himself.

From performing around campus in his college years to giving back to St. Jude on the regular, Paid Pat is far more than just a recording artist — but a hustler in his own right.

His first-ever song “Drip Drop” was released in 2018, and it’s been up ever since. Plus, meeting Waka Flocka Flame one evening on Beale Street would change the course of his music career completely, getting the cosign from one of the GOATS in the rap game.

Paid Pat describes himself as “just a chill ass n#### who likes to get money.”

AllHipHop: Being from Memphis, what was that like growing up?

Paid Pat: I feel like this s### made me. This s### wasn’t easy, but it makes it easier for what I’m trying to do now. It taught me how to hustle. I didn’t grow like a lot of people. None of this s### was handed to me. Growing up here put some hustle in me, to know how to get some money regardless.

AllHipHop: Biggest influences growing up?

Paid Pat: Lil Wayne, 2 Chainz. I f### with everybody music though, I be listening to all types of s###.

AllHipHop: What’s your favorite Lil Wayne song?

Paid Pat: Probably “Lollipop.”

AllHipHop: At what point did you realize that you could do music for a living?

Paid Pat: Probably going to the University of Memphis, that’s when they started showing most of my love. When I dropped my first real song, that went crazy. They was f###### with that s### off the jump, it was called “Drip Drop.” They were playing that m########### everywhere I go. That’s when I thought “aw yeah, you can really do this s###.” I still wasn’t even really focused like this. I really got my confidence like “yeah, I can really do this s###. This s### is me, this s### easy.”

AllHipHop: There’s a lot of fire artists coming out of Memphis, how does that feel?

Paid Pat: It’s making it look easy because the light’s on us right now. We ain’t never had no light on us like that where people tuned in. Most people stealing this s### and running with it. They make it look easy now, connect with different people and get my name out there more.

AllHipHop: When did you pick up the name Paid Pat?

Paid Pat: 3 years ago, I picked it up because I was hustlin’. My name’s Patrick so Pat’s short for Patrick. I put Paid in front of it because I always knew how to get some money. whether it was doing music, selling clothes or selling anything.

AllHipHop: You just put out “Bankroll,” how are you feeling?

Paid Pat: I’m f###### with that joint for sure, because the people f###### with it. It already got 548K views and it’s only been 2 weeks. It got 120K on Spotify. That s### lit. I be excited, chillin’ and waiting for this s### to pop.

AllHipHop: What were you on recording that one?

Paid Pat: I had a bottle of Hennesy in there. That’s how I vibe in the studio, a fifth of Henn and I’ma crank up. [laughs]

AllHipHop: How much gas do you need?

Paid Pat: Well that’s a part of my everyday routine so I be forgetting to count that sometimes. I gotta roll up back to back all day long. It gotta be exotic though. At first, I wasn’t no smoker like that so I’ll smoke anything. But now, I can’t smoke anything. I gotta have some exotic. It’s a different high. It’s a bougie high, I ain’t gotta do too much.

AllHipHop: How does cannabis improve your life?

Paid Pat: That s### be having me chill, that s### calm me down. I might be thinking of some crazy ass s###. If I didn’t have cannabis, we’ll be outside all damn night. Not rapping though.

AllHipHop: Best memory from the “Bankroll” video shoot?

Paid Pat: Having my little brother in that joint. He don’t be with the big cameras, so he jumped in that m########## for me. I was excited. It felt good because I know he be looking up to me. He wanted this s### for me more than I did, that’s what really made me start back doing this s###. I can tell he be tryna move like me. I know he really wants this s### for me. I didn’t want to let his ass down so I started back doing this s###.

AllHipHop: What does family mean to you?

Paid Pat: A lot, family means life itself.

AllHipHop: How much money you keep on you at all times?

Paid Pat: I keep at least a cool $10K on me for sure. I ain’t saying it like it’s a good thing though, it ain’t even good for me to walk around with that much. But $10K, you might catch me with a $30K or something on me. I ain’t gon’ go overboard.

AllHipHop: Do you spend like crazy also?

Paid Pat: Hell yea, that’s why I be having it on me. It might be some s### I dropped off and I’m picking it back up. This s### gotta get spent, I don’t know when my expiration date is. [laughs]

https://www.instagram.com/p/CNlVqAtp3Cz/

AllHipHop: Talk about your relationship with Waka Flocka.

Paid Pat: That’s big bro for sure. He’s a mentor. He’s just a real n*gga. He’s the one who really motivated me to do this s### again too. The time he called my phone, I wasn’t even on no rapping s###. I’d already made my mind up, I was through with this s###. I didn’t know what I was gonna do with my life, but I knew I was gonna go do something.

I gotta make some money regardless. F### the music s###! But then he called me like, “You need to get back on that s###, what you doing?!” So I got back on the s###. It’s crazy because that’s what really made me want to do it, because I didn’t have nobody. Everybody knew who I was, but I didn’t have no big names really f### with me genuinely. Him calling me out the blue, damn okay. I can do that s###.

AllHipHop: How’d y’all meet initially?

Paid Pat: He’d came down to Memphis, I didn’t know he was gonna be down here. We’re chillin’ on Beale street and he’d came down Beale Street, everybody’s screaming and running. Damn, who’s this? I seen him because he big as hell. He walked past us and said, “Damn, what y’all young n*ggas on?” Everybody else screaming and running. I might be a fan of your music, but I might not be a fan type s###.

I didn’t know what he was gonna be on. We’re chilling, we ain’t finna do too much. He walked up to us like “what y’all got going on?” I told him who I was, he told me to DM him on Instagram. Immediately I’m thinking he’s just talking. He ended up sending me his number and we been locked in ever since. He said he knew I was a star when he seen me type s###.

AllHipHop: How does that make you feel?

Paid Pat: The s### was lit. The s###’s crazy because this the same person who’s music I used to listen to in middle school. I never knew we’d be cool as hell.

AllHipHop: Y’all got a song together?

Paid Pat: Nah, we finna do a tape together though. We ain’t got no song yet. I be focused on me, I’m not into looking for features or none of that s###. I want the people to know who I am. I don’t want the people to look at me like “oh this is Paid Pat who got on because of Flocka.” I want them to see me, not “this him who I’m on the song with.” Nah, I want them to see me. My tape finna be just me.

AllHipHop: You got a name yet?

Paid Pat: Pay Up. It’s coming out in a couple months.

AllHipHop: Is “TrapMixGod” gonna be on there?

Paid Pat: Nah, that’s just a single. “TrapMixGod” is almost 2 years old, something I been had in my phone. I ain’t even like the song, Flocka liked the song. He said “bruh, you gotta put this song out bro.” I said “I don’t wanna put that old ass s### out.” [laughs] We ended up putting it out and it did what it did.

AllHipHop: What were you on when you recorded “Took A Break”?

Paid Pat: That’s when I was getting back on the business. That’s why I said “took a break,” because I took a break from the industry.

AllHipHop: How long?

Paid Pat: Probably a year and a half. I don’t even know what I was doing. Everything, in the way. Just bullshitting.

AllHipHop: When’s “Hollywood” dropping?

Paid Pat: That’s dropping on the tape. I had a shot at a little studio, on the green screen, then we went back to the hood. We came back to Memphis. It’s “real n*gga, I’ll never ever go Hollywood.” So we went back to the hood.

AllHipHop: How’s the independent grind been?

Paid Pat: This s### tough, but you gotta be ready for this s###. You gotta make the people f### with you. Everybody’s there for the moment. They riding the wave, whoever got it at that moment. If you coming up, they ain’t too much focused on you like that. You gotta stick with that s###. The s### gon’ pop. The s### gon’ happen when it happens, you can’t really force that s###. People be tryna force it when you ain’t gotta force it. Everybody gonna get a turn, you don’t know when your turn.

AllHipHop: What’re you most excited for when shows open back up?

Paid Pat: I’m excited to travel more and do shows. When all this s### opens back up, I’ma be more busy. I’ma be moving back and forth on some everyday s###. I’m ready for this s### really to move and see different places, new people.

AllHipHop: What can we expect next?

Paid Pat: The project, exect the project in a couple of months. I’m wrapping it up now so the s### finna come out. I might drop something in between time, some singles. But the project’s what I’m focused on right now.

AllHipHop: Is there someone you’d like to collab with?

Paid Pat: Polo G. I f### with Polo G, but that s### gonna happen when it happens.

AllHipHop: Anything else you wanna let the people know?

Paid Pat: Never give up on your dreams. Watch out for all the fake love ‘cause that’s what I’m getting right now. I had a buzz a couple years ago, but I started bullshitting and I wasn’t focused on that s###. A lot of people had just changed up on me, just left me. I’m talking in middle of the road for dead type s###. I got up and did this s### again by myself, people real deal left. I got back up and did it by myself. The same people hit me back up now like, “Damn, I knew you could do it!” All that fake ass s### man, a n#### don’t wanna hear that s###. Watch for that s###, it’s gonna be a lot of that s###.

BABY BLUE Whoaaaa Is Back In The Club!

BABY BLUE Whoaaaa

Some of these guys are built different. Rapper – I thought he was a singer – Anyway, Baby Blue is back in the strip club, even though he got shot just about a week ago. My first thoughts are that this is “this grown a$$ man is nobody’s baby!”

BABY BLUE Whoaaaa
BABY BLUE Whoaaaa

He is a full grown man that is now showing his true strength and dad bod! I didn’t expect to see him in a strip club so soon, because Baby Blue reportedly had to learn how to breathe and walk again after he was shot. He’s a fast learner! He was in ICU and asking for prayers! Clearly, those prayers got answered!

Well I got to tell you, that man is out already and doing his thing, like a Pretty Ricky, boyyeeeeeeee! I am not sure that he needs to be doing all that so soon after a robbery attempt almost claimed his life. Furthermore he has some legal issues that are looming too. The feds charge that he bought a $96,000 Ferrari and numerous other things with a fraudulent PPP loan(s). Why do y’all play with the Feds? So, surviving the shooting may be a gift and a curse, because he will have to do some real  legal wrangling to get out of that situation. By the way, he is facing life in jail!

https://www.instagram.com/p/COMLl3RpXBw/

But, anything but dead! Dead is not good!

Now do you self a favor Rapper Baby Blue and get out of the club. Get your life together bro and don’t let the haters get you again!

Pretty Rick Member Blue Busted In $24 Million Paycheck Protection Scam

Pretty Ricky Group Member Baby Blue Shot, In Critical Condition

Lauren London Back Acting In “Without Remorse” After Nipsey Hussle’s Death

Lauren London was determined to return to work following the death of Nipsey Hussle to inspire her children.

The 36-year-old actress’ former partner was shot dead in March 2019, but Lauren thinks it’s important to set a good example for her kids by returning to work.

Lauren – who had four-year-old son Kross with Nipsey, as well as 11-year-old son Kameron with Lil Wayne – said: “We can’t stop, you know? We do have a purpose, all of us, and it’s important for my sons to see me moving forward with grief, not just curling up in a ball, because I curled up in a ball for a long time.

“But especially for my eldest son because he’s just a little more aware … But we will continue moving on as we had to, as he would want us to.”

Lauren stars opposite Michael B. Jordan, Jodie Turner-Smith and Jamie Bell in “Without Remorse,” and she actually filmed the movie shortly after Nipsey’s death.

She told ‘Entertainment Tonight’: “We shot it in 2019 I believe – and forgive me, my memory doesn’t serve me so well after grief and everything.

“Michael reached out to me as a friend and he was so unsure if I was even going to ever work again. And he was like, ‘Look, I’m unsure if this is what you want to do, but I have to follow my intuition, I have to ask you if can you just read the script.'”

Lauren also admitted that Nipsey’s death has changed how she approaches her career.

She said: “Moving forward in my life, I kind of don’t want to do anything that I can’t really truthfully contribute and I felt like I could truthfully contribute to this project.”

Eminem Went To The Extreme To Get Unopened Copy Of nas’ album “Illmatic”

Eminem once spent $600 on a cassette copy of Nas’ studio debut album Illmatic.

A lifelong collector, the “Without Me” hitmaker loves chasing down hard-to-find items and when he decided he needed an unopened copy of the 1994 classic, he went all out to get his hands on one.

“Man, I couldn’t find that s### nowhere,” Eminem told Paul Rosenberg and DJ Whoo Kid during a Clubhouse room chat as part of his Shady Con online event.

“I finally found one and it cost like 500 to 600 dollars for a sealed copy,” Eminem added, “because who the f### had a copy of Illmatic and didn’t open it? Nobody.

“I think it’s backstock from what record stores had in the back storage – the tapes that never sold, so they just kept them and sold them online. That’s the only thing I can think of.”

The rapper launched his digital festival, Shady Con, last week, giving fans the chance to own a variety of Eminem-approved non-fungible token (NFT) collectibles, as well as some original instrumental beats.

Lil Kim Spills All In New Memoir “Lil Kim: The Queen Bee”

Lil Kim, Hip-Hop’s original nasty girl and lieutenant to The Notorious B.I.G.’s Junior Mafia, is about to release her memoir.

Word is … she is not holding anything back.

The Brooklyn rapper is slated to drop a book about her life on November 2, 2021, that will detail every lil’ tidbit that you’d ever wonder about her including growing up in Bed-Stuy, her relationship with Biggie Smalls, and her time that she served in jail.

According to People magazine, the book was written with AllHipHop alumna Kathy Iandoli, and will be logically called “Lil’ Kim: The Queen Bee” and published by Hachette Books.

“I’m excited to finally get to tell my story after all this time,” Lil’ Kim shared with the publication. “Many people have thought they knew the story of Lil’ Kim, but they have no idea.”

What they do know is that before Kim, they had never heard of a female emcee who took her sexuality and pushed it to the limits. They know her 1996 debut album Hard Core is double platinum and that whenever she landed on a record, whether it was the Grammy Award-winner’s own projects or as a featured artist with the likes of P. Diddy, Mobb Deep, or Mary J. Blige, she stole the show.

Hachette Books, the publishing company releasing the book, promises that the book will be a page-turner.

“Lil’ Kim not only blazed trails for women in Hip-Hop but also inspired the careers of those who followed. However, life at the top hasn’t been easy, either. Lil’ Kim also talks about the hidden moments of her reign: her complicated high-profile relationships, the misogynistic industry she fought to change through sex positivity, the challenging double standards of self-image and beauty in the spotlight, and the momentous act of loyalty that ultimately landed her in prison.”

Lil Kim, born Kimberly Denise Jones, is currently living in a union with Jeremy Neil (aka Mr. Paper) and is the mother of one daughter named Royal Reign Jones Neil. She is 46-years-old.

OVO Sound’s Dvsn Signs With Love Renaissance (LVRN) Management

Daniel Daley and Nineteen85 of the R&B group known as dvsn are now part of a new collective. The Canadian singer/producer tandem announced they signed a management deal with Atlanta-based Love Renaissance (LVRN).

“We plan to change the climate of R&B… So we had to get the team that we know can help us get that done,” said dvsn. The “Between Us” duo joins an LVRN roster consisting of Summer Walker, 6LACK, Shelley (formerly known as DRAM), ​Westside Boogie, and other acts.

dvsn + LVRN (Photo Credit: Sydney Seabron)

Love Renaissance was founded in 2012 by Justice Baiden, Tunde Balogun, Carlon Ramong, Junia Abaidoo, and Sean Famoso McNichol. The company secured a distribution deal with Interscope Records in 2017, and they recently entered into a publishing partnership with Warner Chappell Music.

“We believe dvsn has played an important role in pioneering the next wave of R&B,” stated LVRN co-founder Justice Baiden. “They add a lot to what we feel is missing. With their talent and our dedication to pushing the genre forward to be the Number 1 in music, this partnership is a testament to our intention. We are going to do great things together.”

Since its inception, the record label wing of LVRN has presented numerous studio albums by its signed talent. Former Love Renaissance artist Raury released All We Need in 2015. 6LACK’s Platinum-certified debut, Free 6lack, dropped in 2016. He returned with East Atlanta Love Letter two years later.

Summer Walker established herself as a rising songstress with 2019’s Over It. That album was proceeded by 2018’s Last Day of Summer mixtape which landed the Atlanta native on the Billboard 200 chart for the first time. LVRN also released the Home For The Holidays compilation last year.

Dvsn is currently signed to Drake and Noah “40” Shebib’s OVO Sound imprint along with PartyNextDoor, Majid Jordan, Roy Woods, Popcaan, and Baka Not Nice. Daley and Nineteen85 let loose their third studio LP, A Muse in Her Feelings, in April 2020.

The Toronto-based twosome’s album catalog also includes 2016’s Sept. 5th and 2017’s Morning After. The 5-year anniversary vinyl of Sept. 5th will be released on July 12, 2021. Only 4,500 copies of that special edition will be produced worldwide.

This Innovative Piece of Music Technology Available Now at Massive Discount

The Easy Splitter Pro is a premier piece of music technology that’s currently on sale for just under $40, which is a massive discount from its regular price of $599. Don’t sleep on this special opportunity, especially if you’re an active producer or creator who has grown tired of trying to remove vocals from their songs manually.

The fast-processing splitter uses an AI-based vocal remover to split any song into four STEMs: vocal, instrumental, drum, and bass. Users can play each split song on their own audio player with a personalized dashboard and real-time feedback. Being able to save split files, while being able to pull and utilize them individually or together offers those building out a music library a fantastic advantage.

Among the many distinct advantages of producing with an Easy Splitter Pro, users enjoy the technology’s fast processing, which makes splitting up a song run much faster. Web and mobile synchronization let users convert functions and files made on the web version to their mobile app. This comprehensive tool lets users remove vocals from songs without losing any quality in the sound, and store their files easily.

The bug-free, seamless user interface makes Easy Splitter usable for all levels of experience. All you have to do to get going is sign in, push the blue button at the bottom of your dashboard, choose which STEMs you want a song split into, then choose an audio file. From there, you’ll get the STEMs requested to either listen to on the Easy Splitters audio player or download for your own use.

The five-star product has received rave responses from users, including one who wrote, “It does what it says it does. I had a track that I needed to turn into a karaoke track and this program was able to split out all the stems (vocals, bass, drums, and guitar/keyboard) just fine. “

Pick up an Easy Splitter Pro for $39.99 today — a far drop-off from its regular price.

 

EasySplitter Pro Vocal Remover: Lifetime Subscription – $39.99

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Prices subject to change. 

Ja Rule Reportedly Facing IRS Lawsuit Over $3 Million Tax Debt

Is Ja Rule once again having an issue paying his taxes? A new report claims the rapper (born Jeffrey Atkins) is being sued by the United States government for a federal tax debt of $3,139,237.76 for the years of 2005-2010 and 2012-2017.

The entertainment website Radar Online reportedly has court documents that show the Internal Revenue Service is seeking to collect that $3 million from Ja Rule. According to the outlet, the IRS claims the Queens-raised rapper refused to pay the money.

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Ja Rule is not the only individual named in the legal papers, according to Radar. His wife, Aisha Atkins, is also accused of stiffing Uncle Sam and their fellow Americans out of taxes. The IRS supposedly wants the court to enter a judgment against the Atkins couple.

This is not the first time Ja Rule has been connected to tax evasion during his three-decade career in entertainment. In July 2011, he received a 28-month prison sentence for failing to pay $1.1 million in taxes on more than $3 million earnings between 2004 and 2006.

A year earlier, Ja Rule pled guilty to a weapon possession charge resulting from a 2007 arrest in New York. The Pain Is Love album creator was allowed to serve the two-year state sentence and the federal sentence concurrently. He was eventually set free from Ray Brook Federal Prison in May 2013.

Ja Rule also faced accusations of scamming would-be concertgoers and Bahamian businesses with the ill-fated Fyre Festival of 2017. While the event was promoted as a luxury experience in paradise, it turned out to be a disaster that left travelers stranded with no food, contractors without compensation, and local vendors in debt.

Both Ja Rule and his partner Billy McFarland were hit with multiple lawsuits over the Fyre fiasco. One group of attendees recently won a $2 million class-action settlement. In 2018, McFarland was sentenced to six years in federal prison for wire fraud.

Ja Rule repeatedly insisted he was not responsible for the failure of the Fyre Festival. However, the longtime Murder Inc. Records representative was heard in Netflix’s Fyre: The Greatest Party That Never Happened documentary at a team meeting saying Fyre organizers’ misleading promotional tactics were not fraud just “false advertising.”

The 45-year-old reality show star is still attempting to get paid off the botched concert. In March, Ja Rule announced he was selling artwork associated with McFarland’s Fyre Media as an NFT. The East Coaster even said he is open to doing another music festival. In addition, Ja is advertising his Iconn talent booking app.

“City of Lies” Director And Producer Talks Biggie’s Death, LAPD and Why This Film Is Important

Before we could even process the death of Hip-Hop legend DMX, we are still sorely heartbroken about the unsolved murder of The Notorious B.I.G.

However, filmmaker Brad Furman and the Christopher Wallace Estate, Mrs. Voletta Wallace (mother) and Wayne Burrow (former manager) have pulled together an intriguing crime movie, “City of Lies,” based on the “Labyrinth” book by Randall Sullivan.

Starring Johnny Depp and Forest Whitaker, the movie explores how the corruption of the LAPD made it virtually impossible for Biggie’s death to be solved.

AllHipHop.com sat down with director Brad Furman and producer Wayne Burrow to break down the importance of the film and why Biggie’s mom gave it her stamp of approval.



AllHipHop: Brad, if you could talk about yourself for a little bit and then Wayne if you can?

Brad Furman: I’m Brad Furman. And I’m the filmmaker and director. Very honored to be here with you today very honored always to be with Wayne. Wayne produced the movie with me and without him and Mrs. Wallace we could have never made this film. And, you know, it is an investigation into the corruption institutionally of the city of Los Angeles and the LAPD and you know the details and facts of what we uncovered in our version of a reinvestigation based off the book “Labyrinth” by Randall Sullivan. When I got that book, it was almost a little over 10 years old, so I felt a deep responsibility to do a version of a reinvestigation and in the Wallace civil suit. 

Sergio Robledo, who has sadly passed was the lead investigator on the case. Johnny Depp plays Russ Poole, the lead detective, you know, in the Wallace murder for the LAPD at the time, Sergio Robledo was his supervisor at the time during his tenure for quite a long period. And Sergio was invaluable, obviously, prior to his passing, and, you know, connecting me to the Wallace estate and to Wayne, but also really in helping me reinvestigate the case. And that’s really where it all began for me. And that’s essentially in theory and a bit of practice how Wayne and I got connected.

Wayne Barrow: How yall doing, this is Wayne Barrow. First off, I want to start by at least acknowledging a fallen soldier, a good brother. DMX. A powerful voice spoke to the darkness in a lot of people and has had his own darkness to his life. But he was a shining light on so many different levels. And I just want to say rest in peace to him. And my condolences and prayers to his family, the Ruff Ryders, and the whole team. God bless him and God bless you guys. 

I managed Notorious BIG, with my partner Mark Pitts. And in life, and in death, I manage Mrs. Wallace and helped her manage the estate over the last 24 years. And I came upon this film, through the connection of Brad of course, who reached out, indicating that he needed some help. And you know, he was doing this wonderful film. And we sat, we watched, we talked and at the end of the day, it was something that we just couldn’t pass on, because it was too important to not only BIG’s story but the culture of Hip-Hop.

It’s very, very, my opinion, thought-provoking. It’s very, very strong in terms of the lead characters, Johnny Depp and Forrest Whitaker. And in terms of the story, this is not just about Notorious BIG, and I want to be clear on that because it’s more about what we as black and brown people face every day. And that’s police corruption, inequality, things that are speaking true to us today. And I think that you know, it was just as prevalent then, as it is now. 

The differences now it’s more broad, and more of a focal point because of social media. And I don’t want to lose sight of the fact that we’ve lost a friend, we lost a father, son. And you know, a lot of fans out here still trying to understand what happened. No different than the family, but my obligation is to make sure that people hear the truth. And that was the purpose of us, myself and Mrs. Wallace coming on board to help navigate this thing to where it is now.

AllHipHop: I definitely think that you guys made some really great connections in the film, and you drove home some points that many people might have, missed. The idea that the LAPD were hesitant to kind of go full in because they were in the shadows of the Rodney King verdict. Talk about the connection between, from what you saw as presenting it as a drama, The LAPD’s juxtaposition of the Rodney King trial and Biggie trial.

Brad Furman: I think there was a race war that was existing inside the department that was born out of things post-the era of Rodney King, and the OJ trial. And politically, what happens is, when you’re dealing with this bureaucratic system, Russ Poole, as the investigator, for example, he was very simple in the fact that he just wanted to protect and serve because he believed that that was the duty that he was supposed to. And agreed to do. 

But politically, as we see, in many businesses, and this is about business, and money, and greed, and all these other things, other things become priority. And that was not something that Russ in particular could really deal with. And that that’s really the beginning of the larger challenge in all this. And that’s where this gets really tricky because the truth wasn’t really honored. And the corruption was so deep, and the relationships, unfortunately, between certain police officers who are individuals who are not honoring their code and the relationships they had with Death Row. 

It’s a unique web. That’s literally why the book was called Labyrinth. It’s a labyrinth, it’s pretty wild, and you see through the movie, we start one place, and we go another, and another, and they’re all very much interconnected.

Wayne Barrow: I just want to speak on something real quick. There’s a lot of theories that have been flushed into the marketplace. And, you know, just like anything else. There are facts, then there’s truth, then there’s reality. And not all times you get all those things in one to get a better understanding or a true gauge exactly what happened, right? This film speaks from a factual standpoint. There’s nothing about it that stands on theory or ideologies, or notions, these are facts. And these facts can be presented. This is about people’s lives. It’s about finding out what really happened, how it happened. And who did it, this is not one of those “who dun it cases” in terms of a mystery if you will. 

The facts point to some real, real, strong elements that really kind of give you a lay of the land of what happened and how it happened. However, there’s a lot of things still, that can’t be spoken on, because one, the case is “still pending.” 

Two, we also want to make sure that the facts that are presented are presented in a way that we can actually deliver to you exactly the information necessary for you to truly understand the dynamics of not only what this film represents, but what inequality and police brutality and the essence of bringing us to a place of understanding our own shortcomings, if you will, by presenting the facts, the way that we are actually doing so not only in this film but just in so many different people across the board speaking out about the black and brown people’s element of being able to elevate. And become more purposeful in life. In the eyes of others, I think that’s a very key fact.

AllHipHop: Was that part of the reason why you chose to work on this drama versus possibly doing yet another documentary because maybe dramatically showing it makes it hit harder?

Wayne Barrow: You know what? At the end of the day, it’s like you could tell so many Biggie stories you can tell so many things about not only his life but his death. You can talk about the different levels of corruption across the board, whether it be in the music business, how we’re talking about police brutality here, or corruption or deception, or whatever you want to classify it as. But at the end of the day, I think that this story was so important that it needed its own face, it needed its own sensibility if you will. Yes, it’s about Christopher, it even mentions Tupac, God rest his soul. But at the end of the day, though, none of that really matters. Because what matters is the core of the story. What is the core story? How does it relate how they relate to the people? How would it relate to the viewers? How does it affect you? Right, from an emotional standpoint, from a connectivity standpoint? 

I think if you look at it from that standpoint, then this is just a crime drama that’s dope as s###. We’re bringing you the reality of what happens in these communities day after day, night after night, right? Mothers are afraid to send their sons out to go to the corner store, just to pick up a pack of Skittles, or sending their daughters to walk outside because you don’t know how these people are going to attack them. Right. It’s just a lot of different nuances that we could speak about in so many different terms. But the bottom line is this is a crime thriller. And it’s a crime thriller, that we live in our community every day and it needs to stop.

Brad Furman: I think, in addition to what Wayne was saying, for me as someone who was a fan of Biggie, a fan of Pac, and the deep influence that black culture and them as individuals has had on me, I felt a very deep responsibility in making the movie to humanize these gentlemen. Because when you were when you become this massive, iconic, larger-than-life figure, we as other human beings and fans lose sight of the fact that Biggie he was a father, and that Biggie was a son to a mother. 

So that’s why it was so crucial and important to me, to have the blessing and support of Mrs. Wallace and Wayne and everyone and work hand in hand with them. Because I felt a deep burden of responsibility that I couldn’t take on this responsibility and challenge without hand in hand. And I don’t have the experience of being Black or Brown and walking those shoes. So it’s even more important that I understand that. And I’m aware of that. And being cognizant of that, make sure that we’re all working together. And change is something in a large way, that is really hard to do. But it does start with each and every individual. 

So if the movie, ultimately from a messaging standpoint, makes you angry, which people have said to me, or makes you stop and think or makes you question, then maybe just maybe from an individual standpoint, and then a collective standpoint, we can begin to start asking the hard questions, but really making the right choices within ourselves, to do the right things as individuals, but equally to demand the people within the institutions to be doing the right things as well. And as Wayne said, it’s pervasive of what’s going on in our society today. To me, that’s what’s so important about the film, from that perspective. But Wayne is right it is all encased in this unfolding narrative of this dramatic crime thriller, and Johnny Depp and Forest Whitaker are really the Trojan horses, carrying the messaging to the world.

Wayne Barrow: That’s why I love Brad so much, Nicole, There are not many people that you come across that is honest about their understanding of the world. Not everybody wants to put themselves on the block and say, “You know what, I don’t know too much about black culture. But let me go ahead and exploit it. We get a lot of that. Brad is the exception of that. That is my guy, that’s my brother. Because he’s been honest from the start and pure. 

And these conversations are important. And these conversations are definitely needed between our communities between our mindset. We all human, no matter how you slice it, we’re all human. We’re spiritual beings. So how we live our lives, of course, it’s going to be based on you know how we support ourselves in this space of humanity. And I just want to give kudos to him for being one of those standout individuals that puts race aside and just understands, not only his place in society but his place in the culture of Hip-Hop, which is made for everybody.

AllHipHop: I wanted to just build on that. The movie does not stray away from showing crookedness on both sides. There are black crooked cops, and there are white crooked cops. But it must have been difficult to create this dramatic character that doesn’t seem like a white Savior. So how as a creative did you balance that?

Brad Furman: I was supposed to meet Russ pool. I was two weeks away from meeting him, and I got the word he had passed. And so I never had the chance to really sit down with him. But I had spent a bunch of time with Megan Poole and the Poole family and got a chance through their lens. And also Randall Sullivan, who wrote “Labyrinth” was very, very close with Russ. So I had flown up to Portland. Perry Sanders was their attorney at the time on the Wallace civil case. So I was around all these people who knew Russ, and all I kept hearing about Russ was about his integrity. He was this man wrought with integrity. And that has nothing to do with race. That’s just about him as a human being, as Wayne said, and his integrity. And I wanted to exemplify and personify that. 

And at the end of the day, I was birth, white and Jewish, I had no control over those things. You know, I actually claimed being Jewish, not because I was religious, but because I dealt with so much anti-semitism as a kid, and ironically, you know, who came to my back as a child? Al my black friends. All my black friends had my back, always. Why that is how that happened, I don’t always have the answers for those things. But in my personal experience, and channeling things through the real Russ Poole, it was about a man, a human being with integrity. And that was what I was trying to push forward in what I felt was important about the narrative.

The other thing, because I feel like especially with social media, and the internet, and the microscope, I felt that Biggie to me is more impactful than JFK. Because Biggie is my hero. Christopher spoke to me. I saw Tupac first time with the bandana and Rolling Stone. It was like a two-inch picture. I was like, “Who is that guy?” I was drawn to the imagery of that man. I was drawn to his poetry, I was drawn to the interviews where he was like, “why are we not housing people in the White House?” I was like, “who is this guy saying these things he’s, brilliant.” I was researching Afeni and the Black Panthers and his unique education that inspired him. And I was trying to read and get my hands on everything. And all of these things from these two individuals in particular, and so many others. 

I became a filmmaker truthfully, just to give you an inclination, because of Spike Lee. When I watch “Do The Right Thing” and there’s the scene in the pizza shop, where he’s asking who his heroes are and he’s naming all these Black people. I was like, “Oh my God, that’s my life.” I was like Michael Jordan. Jodeci, I couldn’t stop playing, “Stay” and “Forever My Lady.” So for me, I felt that in understanding my point of view on the world, I understand the distinction between race but I would be dishonorable and dishonest if I wasn’t brutally honest about the impact that the culture and Black culture as a whole has shaped my whole foundation and everything that makes me the man that I am. 

So thereby, too, I think, move forward and all of the collective decisions of this movie, I understood that this was treacherous ground, I understood that somebody said to me, “you don’t know the streets like this, people are gonna rise up against you.” I understood. I had friends in the LAPD and the sheriff’s office who called me and said, this goes to the top, don’t touch this. But it was all of those reasons that I felt like, that’s why I need to tell the story and take the risk.

AllHipHop: I really thought that you did a great job in balancing that throughout the film. It was actually interesting to see how you were able to unearth nuances, that if you aren’t familiar with certain cultures, you wouldn’t have you wouldn’t have picked up so hats off to you for that.

Brad Furman: I appreciate that. mean it just to be brutally frank about it, when you’re young, there’s like an impressionistic thing that happens to you. Honestly, I thought all my black friends were cooler than me, truthfully, I’m being real with you. The way they moved, the way they danced the way they were smoother than me. 

As a young boy, those things were challenges for me, because I felt like I was unable to do things in the manner in the way that I felt they were. But ultimately, in my growth and maturity as an individual, and through the support of my family and hard work and my efforts and things I strove for, I became comfortable with myself. I learned to love me in the process. 

And then when you become whole with yourself, like say, you’re striving to be a filmmaker, you’re not striving to be Spike Lee or Marty Scorsese. I just want to be Brad. And that that that took a long time to figure those things out. Wayne represented him, but when Tyrese Gibson, I have been tight for almost 20 years now, when I first met Rese, he said to me, “you’re my first and only white friend.” That came as a shock. Culturally, we were from different universes, but he couldn’t understand somebody like me talking to him about K-Ci and Jojo. He thought I was like an alien. He was totally confused by it. But we connected on these things. 

When I’ve had my black friends say to me, that it is painful to have the culture like sort of pillaged and raped and used and you hear about it in the rap songs. Jay speaks about it, Kanye speaks about it. There’s a truth to that because people are profiteering off the genius and brilliance of Black culture. And that’s really full circle for me. What I was concerned with making the movie was, not only is this not about profiting, I don’t especially don’t want to profit off the murder of this man that inspired my life. So that was a unique thing that you have to traverse through. And again, that’s why I was like, I will not make the movie, under any circumstances, without the support of the Shakur estate. 

So I made changes to the movie because the Shakur estate asked me after they previewed the movie, “we want to have this changed, we want to have this changed.” There was no requirement legally to do that. I did it because I felt deeply in my heart. Man, if I could sit with Pac, like if I could sit with BIG if I could sit and have a conversation with them. Those guys were my heroes. 

If Pac left everything he had, to his estate, and to Tom Whalley, because he loved Tom and said, take care of everything whether you know, he knew that or not. And Tom wanted “x,” I was doing “x.” So this was my whole thing. The Poole family had to be on board, the Wallace estate had to be on board, the Shakur estate, everybody had to be on board, or else I just couldn’t go to bed at night. And that was just non-negotiable for me.

Shock G’s Funeral Set For Tampa, Digital Underground Members To Attend

Gregory “Shock G” Jacobs, who was also known as his alter-ego Humpty Hump, passed away on April 22. Funeral arrangements for the late Digital Underground rapper are reportedly scheduled to take place on Saturday, May 1.

According to TMZ, Shock G will be laid to rest in Tampa, Florida this weekend. Digital Underground members, such as Ronald “Money-B” Brooks and David “DJ Fuze” Elliot, are expected to be present at the ceremony.

The late 2Pac was one of the most well-known artists to be part of the West Coast Hip Hop collective. A representative for the Tupac Amaru Shakur Foundation confirmed Pac’s stepbrother, Mopreme Shakur, will attend Shock G’s funeral.

Digital Underground made it to radio beginning in the late 1980s. “The Humpty Dance” became the group’s breakout hit with the Shock G-led single reaching #11 on Billboard‘s Hot 100 chart and #7 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.

In addition, Digital Underground found commercial success with tracks like “Doowutchyalike,” “Same Song,” “Kiss You Back,” “No Nose Job,” “The Return of the Crazy One,” and “Oregano Flow.” 2Pac’s Top 20 hit “I Get Around” also featured Shock G and Money-B.

Shock G was found dead in a Tampa hotel room. The cause of death for the 57-year-old, New York-born performer has yet to be revealed. Digital Underground representatives, rap stars, other celebrities, and fans posted condolences for the late recording artist on various social media platforms.

“34 years ago almost to the day we had a wild idea we can be a Hip Hop band and take on the world through it all the dream became a reality and the reality became a nightmare for some. And now he’s awaken from the fame long live Shock G aka Humpty Hump and Rest In Peace my Brotha Greg Jacobs!!” wrote Digital Underground’s Chopmaster J on Instagram.

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A post shared by Chopmaster J a.k.a Big Brutha Soul (@chopmasterj)

Lil Mosey Pleads Not Guilty In Second-Degree Rape Case

Lathan Moses Stanley Echols is facing very serious accusations in Lewis County, Washington. The 19-year-old, Seattle-bred rapper better known as Lil Mosey was charged with second-degree rape.

On Tuesday, Mosey appeared in Lewis County Superior Court to enter a not guilty plea. The judge, James W. Lawler, set Echols’ unsecured bail at $50,000 which means he does not have to pay that amount unless he violates his release conditions.

According to The Chronicle, Echols and his 19-year-old co-defendant Francisco Prater are accused of raping an intoxicated woman at a party in Randle, Washington on January 6, 2020. There is currently a $50,000 warrant out for Prater’s arrest.

The alleged victim reportedly admitted to having consensual sex with Mosey inside a car, but she said Echols and Prater later sexually assaulted her inside a cabin after she blacked out. Mosey was 17 at the time of the alleged incident. The woman was of legal age.

Supposedly, the Morton Police Department began investigating the day of the incident. However, prosecutors did not file charges until April 2 of this year. Lewis County Prosecuting Attorney Jonathan Meyer informed Billboard that Mosey faces a minimum of 78 to 102 months in prison if convicted of second-degree rape.

“Any crime against a person is going to be taken very seriously by this office, especially when we have the time of actions that are alleged here,” Meyer told the music-based outlet last week.

Lil Mosey broke onto the national scene with the Platinum-certified single “Blueberry Faygo” off 2019’s Certified Hitmaker studio LP. The song peaked at #8 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and amassed more than 800 million streams on Spotify.

The Cole Bennett-directed music video for “Blueberry Faygo” has collected over 215 million plays on YouTube. Besides Certified Hitmaker, Lil Mosey also released the Northsbest album in 2018 via Mogul Vision Music/Interscope Records.

Polo G Calls Out Murda Beatz For Claiming Songwriting Credit On “Rapstar”

It appears Taurus “Polo G” Bartlett and Shane “Murda Beatz” Lindstrom are not seeing eye-to-eye when it comes to songwriting credits for Polo’s “Rapstar” single. The “Doors Unlocked” collaborators took to social media to give their side of the story.

Over the last several days, Murda Beatz has been celebrating “Rapstar” hitting the #1 spot on Billboard‘s Hot 100 chart. The Canadian producer posted screenshots apparently showing he is credited as a songwriter for the track.

On April 22, Murda tweeted, “Another #1. Been a crazy week. Proud of this one. Congrats to everyone involved.” A few days later he added, “2 Weeks in a row we got the #1 record… Salute 2 everyone involved. #RAPSTAR Keep God first.”

Polo G apparently took issue with Murda Beatz implying he was heavily involved in the creation of “Rapstar.” The Chicago-bred rapper wrote a response to the 27-year-old production wiz on his Instagram Story.

“Ok… ‘Rapstar’ that’s currently on YouTube was only produced by Einer and Synco. Not only that, but YK. Damn, well ain’t no n#### help me write s###, so for Murda and his camp to keep postin’ that s### is lame asl,” Polo stated.

Murda Beatz then returned to Twitter to offer a rebuttal. His initial tweets seemed to be subliminal replies to the 22-year-old Columbia recording artist, but a later tweet made it clear he was defending his involvement in the creation of Polo’s#### record by sharing a link to a Spotify page that lists him as a songwriter.

“Proud of this song we made a couple of years ago and now it’s a global hit,” declared Murda on Twitter. “Original creators always get credited on songs even if remade. Nothing but love.”

According to Tidal, Bay Area native Synco and ukulele player Einer Bankz are credited as the official producers for “Rapstar.” Murda Beatz (as Shane Lindstrom) is credited as a composer and lyricist along with Polo G, Einer Bankz, and Alexander Wu.

https://twitter.com/murdabeatz_/status/1387167942220009474?s=20

https://twitter.com/murdabeatz_/status/1387168166044790785?s=20

Death Row Records Sold Again In Deal Worth A Quarter Billion

The Death Row Records catalog has been sold again.

In April of 2019, eOne Music acquired the label that had the West Coast dominating music in the 90s for $215 million.

Less than six months later, eOne music became a part of the Hasbro toy company empire after it acquired the property in a billion-dollar buyout the following August.

Now, financial giant Blackstone has bought the Death Row music rights in part of the acquisition of Entertainment One Music (eOne Music) for $385 million in cash.

“This transaction will ensure that eOne Music is well-positioned to unlock great opportunities for its many talented artists and partners,” said Hasbro’s Chairman and CEO Brian Goldner. “On behalf of the Board and Hasbro management, I want to recognize the strong leadership of Chris Taylor and the entire eOne Music organization.”

“I’m excited to continue to lead and grow this exceptional business,” Chris Taylor, the eOne Music Global President stated. “We want the creative community to know that we are focused on making sure that this only benefits them and the work we do together. I also want to thank Brian Goldner and Hasbro for their support and partnership.”

Death Row was once one of the most powerful labels in Hip-Hop. With artists like Tupac, Snoop, and Dr. Dre on the roster, they were set up to be a beacon of Black entrepreneurism.

However, bad business, gang activity, and murder plagued the record company not even ten years into their chart-topping stride.

The label’s co-founder/CEO Marion “Suge” Knight decided to bankrupt Death Row after a legal battle with Michael “Harry-O” Harris and his ex-wife Lydia Harris.

The label was bought by a company called Wide-Awake Entertainment before eOne Music acquired the legendary brand.

RBX Says Death Row May Be Sold Again

Now, outsiders control what happens to its legacy.

It is a sad story of loss for not just Suge Knight, the head of the infamous entertainment brand, but for all who love and understand its legacy in rap history.

Trey Songz Escapes Felony For Putting Cop In Headlock During NFL Game

R&B bad boy Trey Songz is in the clear after he was accused of assaulting a police officer in Kansas City last January.

Trey Songz was taken into custody and arrested after he tussled with a security guard at Arrowhead Stadium during the AFC title match between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Buffalo Bills.

The hit singer was targeted by security for allegedly disregarding the stadium’s coronavirus safety regulations, after he supposedly refused to wear his face mask.

Footage captured Trey fighting with a cop, who was punched and put in a headlock by the “Bottoms Up” hitmaker.

Prosecutors in Jackson County, Missouri have decided to drop a slew of charges against Trey, who was originally charged with trespassing, resisting arrest, and a felony charge of assaulting a police officer.

Despite the video, prosecutors felt they had insufficient evidence to convict Trey Songz.

Trey never seemed overly concerned about the kerfuffle.

Shortly after his arrest, he shared photos of himself wearing his face mask, flanked by a member of the venue’s security team.

“Chiefs game was lit (fun) right?!” Songz captioned the images, appearing to mock his headline-grabbing arrest.

It’s Lit: Jay-Z’s Makes Major Investment In Another Fitness Brand

Billionaire rapper Jay-Z is getting his weight up by investing in a Los Angeles-based fitness brand.

The company is called Lit Method and was founded by Justin and Taylor Norris.

Lit is short for the Low-Impact Training, which is a workout that concentrates on building the body up without breaking the body down.

The Norris couple has used their experience in design and sports medicine, to revolutionize how to get people buffed, like creating a custom rowing machine class that will get that cardio jumping while strength training.

Jay-Z’s Marcy Ventures is poised to dump a gang of cash into the brand, hoping to take it to the next level.

This is the second investment into fitness for the “Blueprint” mogul

In 2020, he partnered with Novak Djokovic, the No.1 men’s tennis player in the world, to bring the world the CLMBR Connected and CLMBR Pure vertical climbing machines.

These two machines, dropping later this year, are said to be the first vertical climber to have a large-format touch display with on-demand.

The device also features instructor-led classes and claims to be “less impact on the joints while providing the most efficient calorie burn per minute of any machine in the marketplace.”

Fitness is important to Jigga.

In 2013 he said, “I’m continuously striving to be the best, I need to operate with my health in full gear.” His trainer Marco Borges says that to achieve this, according to GQ, by doing 3-4 rounds of certain exercises, with 12-15 reps of each.

His routine consists of deadlifts, push-ups, lunges, dumbbell rows, things to strengthen his triceps, cardio via treadmill, rocks the medicine balls and uses weights.

Let’s see if the RocNation founder will incorporate the Lit Method into his regimen.

Kodak Black’s Artist Syko Bob Targeted In Wild Broad Daylight Shootout

Kodak Black and his crew continue to be the targets of hitmen, who seemed to be hell-bent on killing a member of the crew.

In the latest incident, Kodak Black’s close associate and sniper gang member Syko Bob and two of his associates were targeted by gunmen in a broad daylight shooting.

According to reports, the rapper and his friends were sitting in a busy intersection and Lauderhill, Florida when gunmen opened fire on their vehicle yesterday (April 26th ), around 3:00 p.m.

In what sounds like a scene out of an action thriller, a black BMW rolled up to Syko Bob’s car and began shooting.

The driver of Syko Bob’s vehicle punched the gas but struck several vehicles in an attempt to get away from the gunfire. An unknown individual in Syko Bob’s car fired back, causing the BMW to crash into a van.

The occupants of both vehicles abandoned the scene and fled. Syko Bob and his crew were transported to the hospital, where they were treated for minor injuries.

“All three victims refused to cooperate with the investigation and provided no details on the events,” Lt. Michael Santiago told The Sun-Sentinel.

The police are attempting to figure out who was driving the BMW that opened fire upon Syko Bob and his crew, but so far they have no solid leads.

Syko Bob addressed the shooting in an Instagram live post, to let everyone know he was doing just fine after the harrowing encounter.

Earlier this month, Kodak Black himself was targeted by shooters, who attempted to kill the rapper in a McDonald’s parking lot in Tallahassee, Florida.

A member of Kodak’s security detail was shot in the leg during that incident after gunmen followed him into a McDonald’s parking lot and began shooting indiscriminately.

So far, a motive has yet to be determined for either of the shootings.

Shortly after the gunfire erupted Kodak Black posted pictures of himself with his crew, including Syko Bob along with the hashtag #killthatboy.

https://www.instagram.com/p/COHVupoF7mt/?igshid=1pzsqlbz02k4k

Chev – Spur of the Moment

Emerging from the constantly evolving streets of Inglewood, California rapper Chev of Develop N’ Greatness Music Group delivers his new project Spur of the Moment. 

Refusing to let up, this 14 track project is filled with the bar after bar of game as Chev rarely presses on the brakes and reps his city and DNG team fullest. With a calm flow that touches on boldest street topics, Chev has a uniquely unfettered flow that deserves real attention from real rap fans. 

Spur of the Moment is basically like you’re acting off of  the vibe that’s going on at that moment and at that time, right now. So basically we had our plan of how we were going to come up with this tape but at the same time it was a lot of s### going on that we had to freestyle  – s### wasn’t going as planned. So our whole movement became Spur of the Moment,”  Chev said.  “Like we had to come up with videos in 2 hours, I’m going down for f###### cases, I’m going and getting busted, going down bailing out, n#### I bail out we still got a deadline to drop a tape, to drop the videos and all that s### so, it was hectic but we still got it done. That s### still played out the right way as planned, it still went as planned. But it wasn’t ABCD it was like A-C-M-G-H then back to B and s###, you see what I’m saying?  It was a whole way but we got that s### done,”

Focusing on lyricism while at the same time remaining true to the street entertainment Chev prides himself on effortlessly delivering bars with metaphors and similes all while not flinching or seeming to break a sweat. 

“So my style of music is like I said I got bars, and with the bars like… so first off, I got metaphors, I have got similes, I do imagery, I don’t know if you know what I am really talking about, but imagery like, telling what is going on, youre painting a picture of what is going on, and that’s where the stories come from. I’m telling you exactly what’s going on then I put metaphors and bars inside of that s###,”

With a host of videos planned for the release of his project Chev has videos shot for “No Stimmy,” “Big Smoke” and “Bandemic” planned for the fans and now available on YouTube.

“I got a video called No Stimmy out now, you know that’s like some Detroit rapper s###, we got like a Detroit sound just because of the Detroit beat, we’ve got another song it’s called Big Smoke on some LA s###, we did that video it just hasn’t come out yet. As a matter of fact we got a cool couple of features on the tape, you know Rio da Yung OG, we’ve got my n#### on there, we have got that Couchie man, yeah, that n#### YN Jay, we have got to him. We got one more song on there it’s kind of a cool banger, it’s called Bandemic. Basically it’s like 11 tracks on there, 11 tracks 3 skits, 14 in total. It’s a good body of work; I can’t wait for it to come out it’s going to be some pressure for the streets for sure.”

Dedicated to anyone that’s trying to make something out of nothing Chev delivers real inspiration for not only Inglewood, California but the whole West Coast. 

“It’s a cool ass body of work. Shout out to everybody that’s trying to make a dollar out of $0.15, that’s what the tape is talking about, my whole tape is about getting it how you live, shout out to everybody that’s trying to make a dollar out of $0.15 whatever you’re doing.”

 

Mr. Hanky Beats Talks Producer Influences & City Girl’s “Twerkulator” Record

Mr. Hanky Beats has been on a roll, and he’s not stopping anytime soon. Born and raised in East Atlanta, Georgia, the songwriter and producer knows a thing or two about making hits, and he’s responsible for some of your favorite rapper’s biggest songs to date.

From Lil Duval and Snoop Dogg’s “Smile B####/Living My Best Life” to DJ Luke Nasty’s Gold-certified smash “On the Way” to most recently City Girls’ “Twerkulator”… Mr. Hanky continues to create and do what he loves best.

Mr. Hanky Beats, real name Corey Dennard grew up in a musical household, with his mother and sister being trained musicians. Getting his feet wet playing trumpet in the school band before learning how to play piano, he’d then take those talents to Southern University where he played in the Human Jukebox Marching Band — where he picked up the name Mr. Hanky Beats.

AllHipHop: You’re from East Atlanta,how does that play into your life and career?

Mr. Hanky Beats: Definitely from East Atlanta, went to McNair High School, Moreland Avenue area. It was cool man. A lot of people I grew up with are household names right now, people like Gucci Mane, Ying Yang Twins, a lot of those artists. It was cool.

AllHipHop: Your mom and sister are trained musicians. Was music always going to be your route as well?

Mr. Hanky Beats: Definitely. At one point I thought I was going to be in the NBA, but that didn’t work out. When I didn’t get drafted by the Hawks or the Bulls, I started focusing on my music.

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AllHipHop: How did you learn how to produce?

Mr. Hanky Beats: I was a DJ at first, I learned how to do mixing and rock a lot of parties while I was in college. It was an easy transition knowing how to be a DJ and see what people like. I remember when Fruity Loops first came out, I had a trial version and figured it out from there. Started learning the MPC and working the keyboards, connecting all that. It was cool.

AllHipHop: Were there any producers that you looked up to?

Mr. Hanky Beats: I ended up working with one of the main ones I looked up to one time, Mr. Collipark. When I first started producing, I was signed to Collipark Music. We put out Soulja Boy, Hurricane Chris. Did a lot of tracks for Jeezy during that time, then you had people like DJ Toomp. A lot of local producers. Mannie Fresh down in Louisiana when I was in college, he was a major, major influence in everything. A lot of people, Dr. Dre of course. The heavyweights. Scott Storch, the list goes on.

AllHipHop: How did you link in with Mr. Collipark?

Mr. Hanky Beats: Ying Yang Twins was signed to Collipark Music at the time. One of my homeboys I went to college with, John Boy, he had a studio and they used to be up there all the time. When I’d come back from school, they’d literally be up at the studio. I had a beat CD at the time. I was playing beats, we’re chillin’. They said “man, we like them beats.” Okay cool. I didn’t know people got paid for this for real at all, I was just doing it.

It went from there. Another rapper in the area was coming up at the time named Young Joc. He’d dropped his song “It’s Going Down,” it had gone everywhere. I did a lot of work with him and it started growing from there. Once I started working locally, Collipark’s brother Derek hit me and John Boy up and said “I like what you got going on, I want to make y’all a part of the team.” And that was it.

AllHipHop: How would you describe your style of producing?

Mr. Hanky Beats: It’s all over the place. I’ve been blessed to have a lot of hit records. A lot of ‘em from “Living My Best Life” to “California,” to even the City Girls record that I have out right now, “Twerkulator,” none of them really sound the same. They’re not in the same vein. Even the “Walk Around The Club (F Everybody)” record, other records I had influence with, they’re all over the place. Their party, have fun, good records. Even the hood stuff, you gon’ have a good time with it.

AllHipHop: What was your breakthrough as a producer?

Mr. Hanky Beats: My first big, big placement is the one I did around that Collipark time with Cadillac Boys. They were a local group signed to Collipark and signed to Kirk from Love & Hip Hop, which is Rasheeda’s husband. That record led into doing some stuff with Jeezy and Hurricane Chris, it went on from there.

AllHipHop: What was the inspiration behind your name?

Mr. Hanky Beats: I got the name Mr. Hanky while attending Southern University. I was in the band, the world famous Human Jukebox. I was a freshman and back then, they’re called crabs. You had to shave all your hair off. South Park was a very popular cartoon at the time. I straight up shaved all my hair, all my facial hair off. I walked into practice and one of the upperclassmen said “man, you look like Mr. Hanky from South Park.” What? I wasn’t even thinking about it. He said “man, you look just like Mr. Hanky from South Park.” So the name stuck, I rocked with it.

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AllHipHop: How did “Smile B####/Living My Best Life” by Lil Duval happen?

Mr. Hanky Beats: That record happened with a DJ, my homeboy Bay Bay. He’s a huge radio DJ out of the Dallas and Shreveport area, shout out to him. I met Bay Bay back when I was with Collipark when we was doing the Hurricane Chris project. Because that song “A Bay Bay” is about the DJ Bay Bay, he’s saying “A Bay Bay, turn up my song.” Bay Bay hit me up and said “I want to do this song, I want you to do the beat.” I said “cool,” so I did the beat. He said “I need to get Lil Duval on it. I want to link y’all up, he wants to do an intro.” So we did the intro, it took about all of 5 minutes. Me and Duval were sitting there choppin it up. He did the “Smile B####” skit he’s doing on Instagram every Friday. He’d do it to a different old school song.

We’re sitting there, he did it. I said “aye man, do you have song for that? You need to put out a song for it.” I had a bunch of beats I did from the “California” era. I did the “Smile B####” on January 4, 2016. He pulled that beat up, he pulled up another beat, and that was it. Once I pulled that beat up, he did “Smile B####” for 4 minutes. There was no “living my best life” part, there was no rap, no verse, no nothing on it. I got the session and thought “let me put it in some format.” He said “who do I send it to?” Because he’s cool with T.I., I said “go ahead and send it to Tip. That’s your buddy, he right there.” He said “nah, I want to do it with somebody different. Let’s send it to Snoop, see what he does.”

2 weeks went by, Snoop didn’t say anything. On a random Friday out the blue, he texted me and said “check your email.” Snoop filled in the hook, the chorus, and did a verse to it. We got back in the studio and he released it, we hadn’t had the sample cleared or anything. He just put it out.

AllHipHop: What was your reaction when you heard it?

Mr. Hanky Beats: I called him and said “what you think about it?” He had a rough version of it. He said “man, they loving it on iTunes.” I said “what? iTunes?” It was still the rough mix, it hadn’t been mixed or mastered. Radio people was hitting me up for it so I went along with it. Pretty much like this City Girls situation, it got out and I had to roll with it.

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AllHipHop: Talk about the City Girls situation. That’s amazing.

Mr. Hanky Beats: The City Girls song “Twerkulator” was done October, the fall before COVID hit. My guy Slab that you see a lot with Rick Ross, he’s a phenomenal songwriter. He said “I got this idea, I want to do a song for the City Girls called ‘Twerkulator.’ I need an uptempo dance beat.” I said “okay cool,” sent it to him. They did it. They’re supposed to put it out on their album but we couldn’t get the sample cleared for “Planet Rock,” so we weren’t gonna put the song out. Mysteriously about a week or 2 before their album was supposed to drop, the whole album leaked.

“Twerkulator” was supposed to be held back, but it got put out on the leak. Ever since it came out, people said “I like what you did with that City Girls song.” I tried to play it off like “what you talking about? [laughs] I didn’t want any legal issues because it wasn’t cleared at the time. A year later, if I went on my Instagram and searched “Twerkulator” City Girls, it’d be hundreds and hundreds, almost thousands of these tweets talking about “release ‘Twerkulator’!” It started hitting Instagram, I started seeing the challenge on TikTok. It was the #1 song on TikTok the other day.

AllHipHop: How does that make you feel?

Mr. Hanky Beats: It’s exciting but it’s crazy at the same time because we don’t know where we are with it right now. I’ve done 7 different versions of “Twerkulator” since then to get around the sample song. Last time I talked to Coach K, he said “man we gotta get this done. We gotta figure this out.” There might still be some hope for “Twerkulator.”

AllHipHop: Talk about your forthcoming single “Nutty Twerk” with Erica Banks.

The single “Nutty Twerk” is coming out very, very soon with Erica Banks. Shout out to her and 1501. The song, I can’t even describe it. It’s a fun song, but it’s a real song. A guy’s in a situation where a girl is twerking on him, she makes him wet his pants by either twerking or spilling a drink. It can go several different directions. It’s a great party record, Erica Banks went off. It’s a crazy record. The video’s crazy. The DJs are loving it. It’s going to be one of the songs of the summer, along with “Twerkulator.”

AllHipHop: How’d that collab happen?

Mr. Hanky Beats: We already had the record done. The guy Richy Coinz that’s on the record as well, he has a great relationship with her manager. We put the record together, made it happen.

AllHipHop: Bring us back to when you made “On the Way” featuring DJ Luke Nasty.

Mr. Hanky Beats: That’s another beat done around the same time I did “California,” which had Young Dolph, Ricco Barrino, Colonel Loud, and T.I. That was in that same batch of beats that had “Livin My Best Life,” all that. We had “California,” then Luke came out with “Might Be.” Luke came to town because had a show here in Atlanta. His manager Waleed Coyote with EMPIRE, who’s over our account with Empire for “California,” he said “hey man, Luke’s in town. We love your sound.”

We went to this club called Taboo 2 in Atlanta on a Sunday night, I’ll never forget. We got plastered. We went through 2 bottles of Hennessy. I got a video of me and Luke sitting in the back of a BMW, I was playing the beat and he started singing it. He started singing the hook because a girl called him and he’s telling them he was on the way. Luckily, someone caught it. We caught it on tape ‘cause I don’t think any of us remembered it. We went to the studio and that was it. All organic over here.

AllHipHop: What do you make of all these organic relationships?

Mr. Hanky Beats: It’s a thing you gotta have. Nothing’s ever forced. Even with the City Girls situation, we were prepared to make it happen and give them what they needed. It happens. The success of the records and the popularity speaks to that because they’re all records that people can identify with. They’re very relatable records, they aren’t forced. It helps out with the overall success of it.

AllHipHop: How’d you get your producer tag?

Mr. Hanky Beats: The first I tag I got from a young lady, she was in a singing group and had a great British accent. She was joking one day ‘cause she started talking like that. The new one I have is from a young lady who’s British. She said “I can tell that the other person that did it is not authentically British. I’m going to do you a real one.” She went in and did it, that was it.

AllHipHop: 3 things you need in the studio?

Mr. Hanky Beats: I need a woman, I need several women in the studio. [laughs] I need wings and water.

AllHipHop: You need women at all times?

Mr. Hanky Beats: At all times. I’ma tell you why, because women are brutally honest. They’ll tell you if they like something, if they like a beat, if they don’t. Especially the ones I know, they’re brutally honest. “Ehhh, this okay.” Or “this sounds like somebody else’s stuff,” or “that’s wack.” They’ll tell me straight up. That’s what I generally base everything around because most guys don’t care. They’ll say whatever to speed up the process so we can go to the club or what not. But women will go out and support: they’ll buy tickets, they’ll buy t-shirts. They’ll actually go buy and download things.

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AllHipHop: Talk about starting your own company called Cultural Resources.

Mr. Hanky Beats: “Nutty Twerk” will be the first record released under Cultural Resources. What’s different is it’s my record featuring Erica Banks and Richy Coinz. I’m using that to launch the label, the company. I have a couple of artists I’m looking at to sign under Cultural Resources.

A very necessary move because as a producer, there’s only so much you can do. I’ll still be making records for other people but look at Dr. Dre, look at all the greats. Puffy brought out Biggie, Dre brought out Snoop, they’re all under their own company. So it’s very necessary as a producer because a lot of times, we’ll be able to get an artist a hot single.

It could be the #1 record in the world, the label comes in and brings in their producers and songwriters, then the whole project fails. It’s mainly to be able to create and see something all the way through without the politics of all the labels getting involved.

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AllHipHop: Goals yourself as an artist at this point of your career?

Mr. Hanky Beats: My goal is to create a superstar, I’m doing that right now with a young lady named Kissie Lee. She has a record called “Sheesh” going crazy that I produced with her and LightSkinKeisha. It’s doing very well out here. She got over a million views in 2 or 3 weeks on her video “Sheesh.” Like the Dr. Dre’s and all those people: I can make hits, but now I’m trying to make hits and create superstars.

AllHipHop: Anything else you want to let us know?

Mr. Hanky Beats: A lot of up and coming artists or other artists, they might get intimidated. I’ve heard that before because of the big records I’ve done. They feel as if it’s crazy, but I’m one of the most approachable people ever. I’m still looking to work with more artists. Just ‘cause you hear me with City Girls and all these big huge records, you can hit me up on the Gram and we can make it happen.