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Talib Kweli Questions Kanye West’s Trump Endorsement

(AllHipHop News) Kanye West has lost a lot of fans in the past few day, but Talib Kweli seems hopeful for the Chicago rapper.

Kanye West recently stated that he would have voted for Donald Trump if he would have voted. That comment raised the ire of many people of color, women and others since the president elect has offended many groups during his campaign run.

Talib Kweli has worked closely with Kanye West and, in many ways, helped validate him early in his career.

PLEASE READ: Talib Kweli and Company Drop New Dope Album

Check out the comments below.

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Did Rick Ross Just Diss 50 Cent?

(AllHipHop Rumors) We aren’t one to start beef, but check this out. There is a new song by Rick Ross called “Buy The Block Back” and there seems to be a diss to his former adversary 50 Cent in there. Honestly, this is silly, but since its a slow day, lets entertain it. In the song, Rozay says, “I might buy me 10 Denny’s, I might buy Family Dollar Cut it to 50 cent, I got a job for your father I’m tryna help with the rent, I came up from the street My lil son, he a prince, it’s time that we represent.” To me it sounds like an empowering line with some slick talk. If it wasn’t Rick Ross saying it, I don’t think we would even think twice about it.

AHH Stray News: Police Seek Woman For Brawl At Drake’s Crib, Phife Gets His Street, Justin Combs Gives Away Food

Drake

One of the women who brawled at a Memorial Day party hosted by Drake is being sought for her role in assaulting another female during a wild fight. According to reports, police have issued an arrest warrant for Denaysha Coleman and seek to charge her with two misdemeanors for assault and battery. Police are still looking for Coleman, who faces up to 18 months in jail if she’s convicted on all the charges stacked against her.

A Tribe https://www.change.org/p/council-member-i-daneek-miller-a-tribe-called-quest-street-name-change#petition-letter
A Tribe Called Quest honored rapper Phife Dawg yesterday (November 19) when 192nd and Linden Boulevard in Saint Albans, Queens, was officially named after the late rapper. The honorable Councilman I. Daneek Miller of District 27 presided of the renaming ceremony and unveiled the street’s new name, which is called Malik “Phife Dawg” Taylor Way in honor of Phife, who passed away earlier this year after a lengthy battle with diabetes.

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Justin Combs will host his 1st annual “CombsGiving” free community Thanksgiving dinner and block festival this Tuesday (November 22) in Los Angeles. Justin, who the son of business mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs, will assemble his celebrity friends to help him serve up dinner for over 300 families and homeless youth from several area non-profits, including the Los Angeles Youth Network, Jovenes Inc foundation., L.A. Trade Tech Guardian Scholars Program and the LA’s Best foundation. In addition to catered food provided by Food Haus Cafe, the event will feature carnival games, rides, prizes, haircuts, talent show, music performance, petting zoo and more. Confirmed celebrities to serve up the food include Angus Jones, Anthony Anderson, Keke Palmer, Gregg Sulkin, Serayah, Pooch Hall, Rio Mangini, Liane V, Don Benjamin, Masiela Lusha, Brandi Boyd, Trevor Jackson and more. Attendees will also see a performance by boy band New District, while Radio Disney teen DJ Lela Brown will handle the music.

Stupid Rumor Of The Day: Jay Z & Kris Jenner?

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Look at all these rumors, surrounding me every day! Well, back in the day, we did stupid rumor of the day. Now, here is a dumb one, but lets give it some time. It happens to be a slow day. There is a slight bit of validity since the source is apparently Beyonce’s former stylist. I guess that person doesn’t mind never working in the biz ever again in LIFE. Anthony Pazos is the name and rumors is the new game. He said that the cheating issue was with Kris Jenner, the matriarch of the Kardashians, not Rachel Roy. Pazos told the Daily Mail: ”Kris does have good hair and “Becky” always refers to a white woman in the African American community. Becky is a generic white name for somebody – a white girl.” The only thing, Jenner is a grandmother and hardly a girl. I’m not if even sure if she’s white. Then, he falls back and says their relationship as business. What business? Why would Solange go crazy on Jay Z in an elevator over a business relationship? They hate the Kardashians that much? #youneedmorepeople
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Cam’ron Jumps On Uncle Murda’s “Cam’Ron Voice” #ShotEveryDayB

Uncle Murda had that other banger of the summer from New York City with “Cam’Ron Voice.” Well, it seems like Cam’ron understands this as well and has opted to jump on the remix with the Brooklyn street general. Listen up.

#DMVOnTheMove: RAtheMC Has That Hip Hop That’s Encouraging People To Live A Royal Life

(AllHipHop Features) “Look for me I got that…,” recites RAtheMC on her new single “Dope.” Even though she doesn’t finish the line, it only takes a matter of seconds for the listener to realize exactly what the rapper has ready.

The track is three minutes of an emcee putting her lyrical ability, flow, and delivery on full display. Like the Kemetic god of the same name, RA is a creator that emanates rays of light to her followers.

The Washington, DC native has been shining that brightness onto loyal fans for several seasons. Not surprisingly, RA’s glow has not begun to fade yet. She has a lot more to give.

[ALSO READ: #DMVOnTheMove: DJ Young Music Is A Teenage Mogul With A Goal To Change The World]

“My strategy is consistency in 2016, to show growth to the people who’ve been following me for years, and to show authentic creativity to the people,” RAtheMC conveys to AllHipHop.com. “I’ve never been a trend follower or gimmick branded artist. I’ve always stood on great music and a great show. That will continue to be the focus moving forward but on a bigger platform and larger sound.”

RA is from the region of America known as the DMV (DC, Maryland, Virginia). The locale is becoming the site of a rapidly expanding Hip Hop movement.

In many ways, Wale’s mainstream success shifted attention toward what was happening in the area around the nation’s capital. The Maybach Music Group signee was followed onto the national stage by performers like Logic, Shy Glizzy, GoldLink, Fat Trel, and King Los.

There are now dozens of other rhymers right on the cusp of making it onto the covers of major publications and earning prime slots during festival season. A sense of pride about the rap rising out of the DMV is assisting in pushing the culture forward.

“At the moment, I think it’s great,” says RA about the direction of DMV Hip Hop. “There are tons of opportunities for artists that weren’t around when I first started doing music. There are also a lot more outlets and ways of getting your music heard now in the DMV area. I love the way local radio and news media spotlight up-and-coming artists from the area.”

RA’s true start as a music act can be traced back to her participation in the choir at church and talent shows in middle school. It was during that same teenage time period when her father took the young showstopper shopping in Manhattan, a trip that would be the catalyst to her eventually stepping into the booth.

“There was a guy with a boombox and a mic on Canal Street rapping and selling mixtapes. My dad told the guy, ‘Hey man, let my daughter get on the mic,” recalls RA. “He did, and the more I rhymed, the bigger the crowd around me got. Music was literally the end-all, be-all for me after that.”

The journey to becoming a DMV standout also includes being a participant on season 2 of the television competition show The X Factor. Taking part in the Simon Cowell-created series was an eye-opening experience for RAtheMC.

Performing for industry VIPs Cowell, Britney Spears, L.A. Reid, and Demi Lovato apparently worked out well, but RA acknowledges behind-the-scenes actions may have damaged her opportunity to move forward in the contest. After being eliminated during the last cut of the boot camp segment, the DC representative walked away with a better understanding of why humility is valuable.

#TheXFactorUSA2012

A photo posted by RAtheMC (@rathemc) on

“I thought I was going to go on X Factor and do what I wanted to do. I wasn’t going to perform the songs the way the producers wanted, I was going to perform them my way,” RA confesses. “The funny thing about the experience is the judges loved me, but the producers knew I could be a risk for live television. If they didn’t know what I was going to do during the taping, how could they risk it once we got to the live portion of the show?”

She continues, “In retrospect, I do wish I’d realized the importance of the end game more than just coming in like, ‘I’m the illest thing here.’ What people don’t know is that two members of Fifth Harmony – who went on to win the show – were actually eliminated as solo acts with me. Simon called them back in 10 minutes later and put them in a group that would become Fifth Harmony.”

X Factor has not soured RA’s possible interest in doing non-scripted television in the future. However, don’t look for her as a cast member on the Love & Hip Hop reality show franchise. Sisterhood Of Hip Hop would be a more welcomed program.

SOHH follows female rappers as they build their careers in an overwhelmingly male-dominated profession. The gender dynamic in Hip Hop is a situation RA has had to grapple with as well.

“The bottom line of all the challenges as a female artist is respect. Do you respect me enough to give me a fair shot? It always boils down to that. Can you give my music a chance before you judge? Can I be alongside the male heavy hitters in the game and afforded the same opportunities?” RA asks. “Although it’s a tough business for women, the drive we have to have in order to ensure and continue makes us more determined than a lot of male artists.”

In order to guarantee success for women in the rap game, the ladies may have to connect in the same manner in which male rappers constantly collaborate. In 2014, RAtheMC was able to unite with one of the most revered female rappers of all time.

New Jersey spitter Rah Digga hopped on the track “Best Be Ready.” Rah and RA let the world know they were both intent on expanding their respective queendoms. In addition, the two lyricists made the guys aware they better bring their best bars to keep up.

“Best Be Ready” was more than just a creative union. The record provided the women with a moment to bond outside of the recording space.

“My team and I drove up to New York and met her at Stadium Red, my producer played her the beat, and we vibed for a few hours,” says RA. “Then she ironically went outside to write her verse in the car like I always do, and an hour later we had ‘Best Be Ready’… played the track a good ten times, then we went to her neighborhood in Jersey for pizza and beer. [laughs]”

RA enjoys working with other artists she genuinely admires. Besides Digga, her list of collaborations contains tunes with Joe Maye, BOOMScat, and Ryan Lucas.

The DC pacesetter’s close ties to the community where she was bred is another invaluable link between the entertainer and like-minded individuals interested in emceeing. For example, RA garnered an MTV Video Music Award nomination for “Best Breakout Artist – Washington, DC” in 2009 and voted #1 on the list of Top 15 DMV artists to watch for in 2014 by local radio station WPGC 95.5.

Being a leading underground star is a respectable – and in some cases lucrative – line of work. With music, fashion, and other business endeavors being part of the RAtheMC brand, she has the capability to expand her reach beyond The Beltway. But how far into the realm of stardom is RA willing to go?

“I’m not comfortable with fame at all. However, I’ve learned that I’m at my best when I’m out of my comfort zone. As long as the people I love are not put in harm’s way by the decisions I make in my career and my integrity is not compromised, I’m okay with that level of fame. Whatever that level may be. The level where I can tour, release music, and inspire,” declares the architect of the forthcoming It Takes A Village album.

Presenting inspiration will help nurture the next generation of talent sprouting from Washington and across the globe. For RA, her mission covers motivating others to make music as well as arousing an appreciation for living a gratifying and eventful existence.

“I live for family. I live to encourage. I live to learn and be inspired. I just live,” expresses RAtheMC. “Life has taught me so much just in the last few years, and the biggest lesson of all has been to take life as it comes and make as many special moments as you can.”

#vfiles | Photo Cred: ?? @calvintherebel

A photo posted by RAtheMC (@rathemc) on

[ALSO READ: #DMVOnTheMove: Ezzy Babe Is Entering The Game With His Home State On His Back]

Read other installments of AllHipHop’s #DMVOnTheMove series here.

Purchase RATheMC’s music on iTunes, Google Play, and Amazon.

Follow RATheMC on Twitter @RAtheMC and Instagram @rathemc.

Ginuwine Has The Ladies Going Crazy!

(AllHipHop Rumors) Singer Ginuwine has the ladies going nuts as his ex or ex-fling allegedly leaked his d-ck pics online! You would think it’s the ’90s again the way women have been acting!

Hopefully his hit debut single “Pony” will resurface on the Hot 100 for this man! If the woman was trying to be spiteful, she clearly underestimated the internet’s thirst!

Fellas the sure way to make your stock go up with the ladies [if you are well endowed] is to leak those pics apparently!

https://twitter.com/KokoKreyol/status/799104756467822596

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A post shared by Jasmyne Woods (@jas_thepoetic1)


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Kanye Asks Jay Z Not To Kill Him and And Begs For A Phone Call During Latest Rant On “Saint Pablo” Stop In Sacramento

(AllHipHop News) Kanye West’s Saint Pablo tour stop in Sacramento got off to a promising start last night (November 19), but it ended in disaster after another infamous rant – which only ended when Kanye cut his show short and walked off the stage.

Kanye was performing at the Golden 1 Center. Things were looking good when he brought out Kid Cudi, whom the fans greeted with thunderous cheers.

After Cudi’s intro, Kanye performed three songs, before launching into a rant that included comments about Jay Z, Beyonce and more.

Fans were not too pleased, and soon started chanting “F### Kanye,” and someone even threw something at him when he was ranting.

Others took to Twitter to voice their frustrations with Yeezy.

Some fans paid as much as $600 to watch the rapper, who left an arena full of fans in bewilderment over his latest actions.

Just last week, Kanye made headlines when told an audience at the SAP Center in San Jose that he didn’t vote, but if had, he would have voted for Donald Trump.
Last night, Kanye said:

“Sometimes we be playing the politics too much and forgetting who we are just to win, f##k winning, f##king looking cool, f##k being cool, f##k all that,” said Kanye, who claims he will run for President in 2020.

“I been sent here to give yall my truth even at the risk of my own life, even at the risk my own success, my own career. Jay Z, call me bruh, you still aint call me. Jay Z call me, I know you got killers, please don’t send them at my head, talk to me like a man.”

Check it out:

Mistah F.A.B. Gets An All-Star Lineup For “Still Feelin’ It” Remix Featuring Snoop, G-Eazy and More!

Mistah F.A.B. is a pioneer of the Bay Area rap scene who shows no signs of ever slowing down.

Take a listen to this dope remix of “Still Feelin’ It” featuring Snoop Dogg, G-Eazy, Keak Da Sneak, IAMSU, Nef The Pharoah and Ezale.

http://www.audiomack.com/song/leakeditnet/still-feelin-it-remix

Lil Yachty – “Minnesota” ft. Quavo, Skippa da Flippa

Lil Yachty Is A Young Turk In New Video

He may not appreciate Biggie Smalls, but Lil Yachty is here now. The young rapper is back and he’s brought Quavo and Skippa da Flippa. They are funny together with their frat boy antics. For some reason, Young Thug is not represented here, but the word is he was unable to make it.

Does Future Have Another Hit?

Lets be real. Desiigner has made existence bit harder for Future. Well, the ATL rapper dropped a new one on Drake’s OVO Radio, which will certainly satisfy his fans. Others may feel this sounds like the same ol’ Future – not a bad thing. Check it out.

Joe Budden Drops New Emotive Music Video For “I Wanna Know”

(AllHipHop Videos) Joe Budden endures. The rap god continues to amaze with this new album, Rage & The Machine. In “I Wanna Know,” Budden drops some seriously introspective bars in a darkroom where he reminisces on the past. The visuals have visuals here and the results are impressive. We hear about his relationship woes, his mother shows up and even is son makes an appearance, which is cool. However, once you hear the lyrics you hear the intensity growing and welling up. It makes you long for the good ol days when Hip-Hop represented the realities in and outside of the artist.

Check this one.

Young MA Ejects Fan For Not Having A Phone?

Young MA is dope and getting mass recognition for her lyrical abilities, but a recent move has people scratching their heads. Now, a lot of people are saying that MA kicked the fan out for not having a phone, but that’s not exactly what happened. Apparently they were doing a social media event or something where everybody needed to pull out there phone. Shorty did NOT have a phone and was moved from the front row even though she had copped her ticket.

I guess its Young MA’s show and she gets her way! Check the Vid!

21 Savage Has A Special Druggy Breakfast

(AllHipHop Rumors) So, ya’ll just gonna let 21 Savage die, huh? Dude got on social media and put syzzzzzzzurp on his nice breakfast pancakes! This stunt got the rapper thousands and thousands of views on social media. But, was it helpful to his career? Who cares! are you not entertained by this 9 seconds of pure debauchery? Check it out and comment or just read the comments.

https://twitter.com/21savage/status/799585628430155777

Hope he makes it to be a 31 Savage.

https://twitter.com/JuanxATL/status/799752241460736000

https://twitter.com/BOOMINCA/status/799748882641063937

KNOCKOUT NATION: Andre Ward on “Krusher,” Black Lives Matter and Chasing Greatness

Andre Ward has the biggest fight of his career this Saturday (November 19) when he faces light-heavyweight champion Sergey Kovalev. Even at 32 years old with numerous titles and a 30-0 record, it’s clear from talking with him that Ward still feels he has a lot to prove. After years of legal setback, 2016 has been his most active in-ring year since 2009. He headlines his first pay-per-view with the stakes not just being financial, but the chance to be universally recognized as the best Pound 4 Pound fighter in the world (a title some would say he’s never lost despite inactivity).

In this candid interview, Ward gives insight into his personal views on Kovalev, Black Lives Matter and the role of boxers, and the fine line between chasing greatness and sound business decisions.

AllHipHop: About your role in Creed, I wanted to get your stance on gym politics. In the movie, you knocked out the Creed character on a gym bet and got to keep his car. With so many cameras and media people around these days, is it a violation for the boxers involved to make something like that public?

Andre Ward: Personally, I come from the old school where what happens in the gym is supposed to stay there. It’s not like that anymore — it’s too many cameras and phones out there. People can’t wait to bust out the door and say something happened.

I like the old set of rules because things happen in the gym. You may have a bad day and not look good. That’s not something 20 people should know about. You get knocked down, things happen. Unfortunately, it’s a different era.

Speaking of it being a different era, the politics of boxing have prevented a few big matchups from going down this year. This is perhaps the one superfight in 2016 where we didn’t have a lot of back and forth in the media. Do you feel this fight has more significance in carrying the sport because so many great fights have fallen through?

Ward: Not really. Of course, I want to do my part to contribute to great fights, but I don’t get caught up in what fights didn’t happen. Boxing is here to stay. We may have a slow year, but next year is looking like a great year in the first quarter. I don’t put too much stake in that.

At super-middleweight, you were able to overwhelm a lot of guys with your physicality on the inside. At 175, I’ve noticed your game has become more about timing and finesse and picking your spots on slower guys. How much of that can be attributed to age and facing naturally bigger men?

Ward: I think it depends on the opponent and what’s needed that night. Just because fans don’t regularly see a particular style or nuance in my game doesn’t mean I’m not still working on it. It just means I wasn’t able to pull it off like I wanted or it wasn’t needed. That’s what makes a great fighter, someone who can show something different every time out. And even remind people of what they haven’t seen in a few years or show some new wrinkles out there.

Going back to this being a different era, I noticed Muhammad Ali is the background of your Twitter page. In his time, he fought tough fights regularly. In this era, Floyd Mayweather had the leverage to be selective in when he took a challenging fight because he controlled the business aspect. With you being the premiere athlete now, how does a boxer go about balancing greatness with financial smartness?

Ward: That’s a great question. It’s definitely up to the individual fighter and their team on what legacy means to them. Is it important to just make money or have a strong resume? It is such a fine line and there is no blueprint on how many tough fights you should have or tune-ups. It’s very tricky.

For me, I have a great team in my lawyer Josh Dubin, my manager James Prince, my promotional team, and trainer. Collectively we come together and make these decisions based on where I’m at, where I want to get to, and how much longer I want to be in the game.

The fine line comes if you continue to take tough fight after tough fight and guys are getting beat up, you’ll be criticized for not being smart. But if you’re real selective, you’ll get criticized for that too. You just have to do the best you can to make sound decisions.

Give me the science behind your jab. Most fighters get countered when they try to repeatedly jab to the body. But I can’t recall you ever getting caught consistently with that punch.

Ward: I definitely get countered from time to time, but I was once told that if you want to be a good fighter, don’t jab. If you want to be a great fighter, learn to use that jab. But it has to be an “educated jab.” Like you said, you go upstairs and downstairs, you fient with it. The jab will save you from a lot [of punishment], you can survive when you’re hurt. You can hide your big shots behind it.

It’s one of those things where it’s easy to get away from it because everyone wants to be a two-f##### fighter. That’s cool but all the greats that I’ve seen, they had a great jab and I want to be great.

A lot of attention is being given to athletes and the role of social protest in sports. Where do you feel your role is as a boxer? Since boxing is not a team sport, there hasn’t been a lot of talk about what boxers can or should be doing to push the discussion forward.

Ward: That’s tough. I’m a man who tries to be lead in whatever he does. I try not to make knee-jerk reactions to get press off of things. I’m also a man of inspiration. If I feel inspired and sought counsel on something, I’ll do it regardless of the backlash I’ll get.

It’s tough with the current things going on because obviously I have an opinion on it I want to share publicly. I think about it all the time. I’m African-American. My children are African-American. There are things they will have to face and deal with. I think before you speak, you need to educate yourself and have a plan with it so you’ll be respected in whatever you feel lead to do.

Having watched you interacting with fans, you’re very personable and friendly. That is contrary to how some portray you in the media. Do you think this fight has or will do a lot to dispel some of the claims of you being standoffish and hard to deal with?

Ward: I think I’ve always been who I am. People have to realize the boxing media is not very big. It’s very small and incestuous; this guy knows that guy and this guy. Unfortuntely, one person may have a personal vendetta for whatever reason. They spew out venom without the facts or coming to get to know a person. Other writers will follow up and do the same thing.

When I was younger, it used to bother me because I felt it was wrong and unjust. But as I get older and matured, I’m confident if an individual gets to meet me, they are going to get the person they’re supposed to get. And that is a person who’s appreciative, thankful and somebody who cares about people. So I don’t worry about that no more because the cream always rises to the top. The key is to continously be me.

A few months ago, we talked briefly about the alleged racist comments Sergey Kovalev had made back in 2013 and the Adonis Stevenson “monkey” incident. Recently, he also made a sexist comment to Claressa Shields about needing her to be in the kitchen. Although he said he was joking, do personal incidents like that give you more motivation going into a fight?

Ward: At the end of the day, I can’t bring his personal shortcomings, views on race, and life into the ring. The boxing ring is a very delicate place. I just make a mental note on the type of individual I’m dealing with.

When we get in the ring, we understand a fighter’s struggle, where they come from and their triumphs. We understand that so we can know who we’re truly dealing with. So when those things are said, we add them to the chalkboard to dissect the opponent we’re facing.

What’s your Hip-Hop playlist looking like these days?

Ward: I don’t listent to overall Hip-Hop anymore, but I do listen to gospel rap. There’s some hittas out there, man. Lecrae is one of my favorites. You have Tagoshi, Trip Lee, Transparent, Black Knight; the list goes on and on. These are guys that love God, have a positive message, bangin’ beats and a ton of talent. People definitely need to check those guys out.

Even though you’re not near retirement, when you talk I can sometimes tell you can see your life after boxing. After Kovalev, win or lose, do you feel this will be the climax of your career?

Ward: I feel I have a lot left in the tank. I speak to a lot of guys who are retired, and they tell me “you’ll know.” At the same time, I’ve seen a lack of preparation from athletes. When we’re young and doing good, we feel like it’ll last forever. Mentally, we don’t set ourselves up for the end. I’ve made sure that mentally I’ve prepared for it in every single way.

Andre Ward vs. Sergey Kovalev airs live on HBO pay-per-view Saturday November 19. Friday’s weigh-in will be streamed live on BeatsBoxingMayhem.

 

President Trump Demands “Hamilton” Cast Apologize After VP Elect Mike Pence Gets Booed

(AllHipHop News) Fans of Hip-Hop music delivered Mike Pence a searing message last night (November 18), as the VP elect attempted to take in a performance of “Hamilton.”

Mike Pence was catching a showing of the famed play at The Richard Rodgers Theater, and as he entered the venue, the VP-elect was greeted with boos from the attendees of the Hip-Hop play.

At the end of the politically charged performance, lead actor Brandon Victor Dixon, who plays Aaron Burr, offered up a message to Mike Pence.

“We are the diverse America who are alarmed and anxious that your new administration will not protect us, our planet, our children, our parents, or defend us and uphold our inalienable rights, sir,” Dixon told Mike Pence. “But we truly hope this show has inspired you to uphold our American values and work on behalf of all of us.”

The President, Donald Trump himself, directly responded to the message delivered to Pence by the “Hamilton” cast.

Our wonderful future V.P. Mike Pence was harassed last night at the theater by the cast of Hamilton, cameras blazing.This should not happen!” Donald Trump tweeted.

“The Theater must always be a safe and special place. The cast of Hamilton was very rude last night to a very good man, Mike Pence. Apologize!” President Donald Trump demanded.

“Hamilton” creator Lin-Manual Miranda seemed pleased with Dixon’s message to Pence.

“Proud of @BrandonVDixon, for leading with love,” Lin-Manual Miranda tweeted. “And proud to remind you that ALL are welcome at the theater.”