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Young Thug Thinks Rae Sremmurd Is Sexy

Sometimes it seems like Young Thug is playing the fence or peeping his head out the closet in regards to his sexuality. Or he could just be doing it all for attention. Thug typically refutes any gay rumors, but he also always gives opportunities for his doubters to question it. Well lately, Young Thug is really feeling Hip Hop duo Rae Sremmurd’s new Fader magazine cover. He is feeling it so much that he commented under an Instagram post of the cover calling it “sexy.” What are your thoughts on Thugger?

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Run Down Park Transformed Into Heavy D. And The Boyz Playground

(AllHipHop News) Hip-Hop legend Heavy D was posthumously honored earlier this week, in his hometown of “Money Earnin’” Mount Vernon, New York.

An old run down park was transformed into a lush, green oasis for children and has been renamed Heavy D and The Boyz Playground.

The park was selected due to it’s connection to Heavy and Hip-Hop history and because it is where he filled his first video for “Money Earnin’ Mount Vernon.”

Prior to becoming Heavy D’s playground, the park was vacant.

Debris and other material was cleared, and a sprawling mural of Heavy D and The Boyz went up in just four weeks.

The mural features Heavy D’s last quote before he died: “Be Inspired.”

“This is the park we grew up in, I mean toddlers straight through our twenties, this is the park where it happened,” Heavy’s brother Floyd Myers told CNN.

Money for the park’s rehab was provided by a nonprofit agency called Kaboom, as well as grants from the New York Knicks.

Heavy D, born Dwight Arrington Myers, died suddenly on November 8.

The rapper had a blood clot in his lung and heart disease, which resulted in a pulmonary embolism.

[ALSO READ: Heavy D’s Police Thriller Moving Into Production ]

Heavy was extremely pivotal in helping introduce Hip-Hop to a mainstream audience.

He launched his career in 1987 as the leader of Heavy D. and The Boyz, which featured members DJ Eddie F, G-Wiz and the late Troy “Trouble T-Roy” Dixon.

Heavy D and The Boyz were the first artists on Uptown Records, which was headed up by Andre Harrell. The group powered the label’s early success with songs like “Mr. Big Stuff,” and “The Overweight Lover’s in the House.”

By 1991, Heavy D. crossed over to the mainstream by recording the theme music for “In Living Color,” in addition to landing hit songs on the Pop charts.

Heavy was also instrumental in helping a young executive named Sean “Puffy” Combs, secure an internship at Uptown Records.

Combs’ internship ultimately led to the creation of Bad Boy Entertainment, where Hev was also an artist, signed to a unique deal that granted him 100% of the profits of his recordings under the deal.

Rapper/Actor Will Smith Discusses Pallbearer Duties At Muhammad Ali’s Funeral

(AllHipHop News) Will Smith is honored to have played a part in Muhammad Ali’s grand funeral on Friday, insisting it was a “beautiful” celebration of the great sportsman’s life.

The actor, who earned an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of the legendary boxer in 2001 biopic Ali, served as one of the pallbearers at Friday’s memorial in Louisville, Kentucky, as the late icon’s body made one last trip through his native city as part of the funeral procession.

Will admitted he was blown away by the thousands who lined the streets of Louisville to pay their last respects as Ali’s casket traveled to the KFC Yum! Center, where a public interfaith memorial service continued on Friday afternoon.

“It’s absolutely beautiful. We did a two-hour procession through the state… the outpouring of love,” the star told Entertainment Tonight of the funeral parade. “I learned a really valuable lesson about how the moment of the end of a life illuminates how it was lived. And every day you have to focus and concentrate on making sure you’re living your life in a way that it illuminates the things you want illuminated, and the things that were illuminated today were his love, and his heart, and his unconditional appreciation for all people of every race and color.”

Will added of the huge crowds, “Every age was out there. It was beautiful… ‘Celebration’ is the right word.”

Prior to the procession, the actor revealed he had the chance to talk to boxers and fellow pallbearers Mike Tyson and Lennox Lewis and swap stories about the late fighter many believe to be the Greatest of All Time (G.O.A.T.).

“We all sat around, you know – Tyson, Lewis, and a lot of Ali’s family and me – for about an hour,” he shared. “We all just told the stories and our memories. You know, for me, it’s just humbling to be able to be here with the family in this time of need. He lived the perfect example of how a human being is supposed to live their life. It was beautiful.”

The 47-year-old went on to explain it was the icon’s close bond with his fans which he really admired about Ali, who he spent a lot of time with before, during and after the filming of his biopic.

“As an actor, whenever you play a role, you always take away something that lasts with you for the rest of your life, and I remember (Ali) would just walk away, and you’d look, and he would just be in the middle of a crowd of people,” Will remembered. “No security. He just got on a bus.

“I said, ‘Champ, you just walked into a crowd of people. You got on a bus and just rode away and you weren’t going anywhere. What is that?’ And he said, ‘Aww man. They ain’t ever seen nothing like you before. You got to let them touch you and know you real (sic). You know?’ And I just thought that was such a beautiful idea – that we have to let people actually physically touch you for the aspirational qualities.”

Smith’s comments emerged hours after Ali’s daughter Laila heaped praise on the actor for doing her father justice onscreen.

“He appreciated the great job that Will Smith did playing him,” she told the news show as she explained why she was grateful to have the star as a pallbearer.

“My father had a big impact on his life,” Laila Ali continued. “He did a tremendous job playing that role, and he will forever be associated with my father, because as an actor, that’s kind of a spiritual thing, playing Muhammad Ali – and being able to do it so well. Channel that energy that he needed to bring to that role.”

The boxing champion, who battled Parkinson’s disease for 32 years, died from septic shock in Phoenix, Arizona on June 3.

Lil Poopy’s Father Up S**t Creek? Busted In Massive Gang Sweep

(AllHipHopNews) Lil Poopy’s father Luis “Fat Louis” Rivera was arrested in Boston earlier today (June 10), as part of a 14-month investigation of high ranking gang members according to the Boston Herald.

The investigation spanned from the city to as far as New Hampshire and Rhode Island, and included members of several gangs.

According to authorities, the gangs targeted in the bust operated from Chelsea, Brockton, Malden, East Boston, Revere and Everett.

In the early morning raids, 40 members of the 18th Street Gang, East Side Money Gang and the Boylston Gang were arrested by 400 federal, state and local law enforcement officers.

“I just want to send a message to anyone who wants to be involved in gangs: We’re going to be on you, we’re going to find out who you are, and we’re going to take you down like we did today,” said Boston police Commissioner William B. Evans.

The suspects arrested are believed to have been operating a criminal organization that trafficked drugs and guns throughout Eastern Massachusetts.

Court documents indicate Rivera as a cocaine source for the Boylston Street Gang.

This is not Rivera’s first brush with the law.

Brockton police filed a child abuse complaint against Rivera in 2013, after videos of his elementary school aged son Lil Poopy went viral, featuring the youngster rapping about cocaine and guns.

Ultimately, Rivera was cleared of any abuse or neglect by The Department of Children and Families.

Newbie Ben Schnetzer Taxed Unfairly With Making Wizardry Cool In “Warcraft” ?

While there are some notable examples of franchises making wizardry cool in ways that spell big bank for creators, publishers and movie studios alike, most would be hard pressed to find one that didn’t use children or preteens as their initial jumping off point when it comes to growing a loyal and ravenous clientele.

J.K. Rowling, her Harry Potter books, movies and Universal City theme park ride, anyone?

However, when it comes to the movie “Warcraft,” green lit by Universal Pictures on the strength of the fan base enjoyed by it’s precursor, the multiplayer video game Worlds of Warcraft, unlike the Harry Potter phenomenon and the financially buoyant  “Adventure Time” series, World of Warcraft doesn’t come from a place that is particularly childlike or fanciful (as in being more ‘I believe in magic’ friendly) when stacked up against the blood thirsty and more tangible lust for power ( as in, I believe in beating the hell out of others in order to win prestige, money and women) that defines those who tend to flock to World of Warcraft.

This being what it is, maybe asking people to get excited about a young unknown in Ben Schnetzer as the “cool” wizard Khadgar, opposite a charismatic former Calvin Klein underwear model in Travis Fimmel, who plays Anduin Lothar,  and the established cinematic eye candy that is Paula Patton, playing the tough but beautiful ( even with horns coming out of her face) Garona Halforcen, is a bit of a hard sell.

Truth be told, “Warcraft” is not getting much love – scoring extremely low on Rotten Tomatoes, and getting a number of pretty public dressing downs by many reputable movie critics.

Nevertheless, Schnetzer has taken his task very seriously and is looking to bypass the thicket of critical ill will and hit a home run when it comes to the actual moviegoers and World of Warcraft fans.

“Wielding magic in real life situations – that’s an exciting thing to play with and go for,” says Schnetzer of the task of making Khadgar real and compelling for audiences.  “We all had extensive discussions about what role magic plays in the film and in this world and really broke down the mechanics of it, ” enthused Schnetzer.

“You need to know exactly what you are doing when you are casting a certain spell, or else it’s just not going to read and it’s not going to feel real.”

Hopefully Schnetzer finds that the reality that he is selling as Khadgar is one that the fans are willing to buy – if not the critics.

“Warcraft” starring Paula Patton, Travis Fimmel, Ben Foster, Dominic Cooper, Toby Kebell, Robert Kazinsky, Daniel Wu and Ben Schnetzer is in theaters now.

Veteran Auckland, New Zealand Group Ladi6 Drop New Single “Beffy”

Ladi6 is preparing to releasing their fourth official release since 2009. The group has performed alongside acts like Mos Def, Oddisee, Erykah Badu, Gil Scott-Heron and others.

Ladi6’s new sound aims to “reframe” the late 1990’s, early 2000’s Neo-Soul/Hip-Hop sound, with a bit of electronic music thrown in for good measure.

“We just wanted to trust ourselves and be authentic to what came naturally” group member Ladi said.

Their upcoming EP will be released later this year and will include this single, “Beffy.”

https://soundcloud.com/ladi6/beffy

Production Duo For Rihanna and Others Sign New Act Kes The Band

Chuck Harmony and Claude Kelly are rather adept at nurturing talent. Their production has been featured on songs by major acts like Bruno Mars, Rihanna, Mary J. Blige, Miley Cyrus, Kelly Clarkson and One Direction.

The Grammy nominated producers hope to attain even greater success with the first act off their Weirdo Workshop label.

Kes The Band is an internationally known band from Trinidad & Tobago. Kes has performed and toured the world opening up for artists like Rihanna, John Legend, Maroon 5, Ne-Yo and Evanescence and others.

Their first single “Major” is taken from their forthcoming album Window to the World, which fuses rock, reggae and the Caribbean rhythms.

“What we’re doing now with them involves a freedom of expression that we’ve never experienced before and we can’t wait to share with our fans and to make new ones,” said lead singer Kees Dieffenthaller.

Tray Haggerty Follows Sauce Twins Collabo With “Count It Up”

Tray Haggerty, who linked with Kej Clark and The Sauce Twins’ Sauce Walka for “Everywhere” off his Lifer mixtape, connects with Clark once again. “Count It Up” is the first single off of Tray Haggerty’s forthcoming “Lifer
2” project.

First Democratic Female Presidential Candidate and a Great Victory for Human Rights, Civil Rights and A Luta Continua

©opyright Wynne Alexander 2016
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

To their great credit both Bernie Sanders and Hilary Clinton ran campaigns of respect, high ideals, vision and good manners. If you don’t recall how civil they were – go run the films from the Republican side for that combo meal of carnage and clown show brought to you by the barbarism of Donald  Trump.

Wow – Finally a female is the Democratic Party candidate for president of these United States.

Wynne AlexanderBy: Wynne Alexander
Political Director, CollegeHipHop.com
Wynne Alexander is an investigative journalist who has interviewed national and international artists, icons, sports stars, business and political leaders including Muhammed Ali and Coretta Scott King. She is also the author of the pioneering civil rights book, Get It From the Drums.

But there is more happiness. There is jubilation because on the same night, I’ve lived to see the fabulous multicultural embrace of goodness, brought to you by Bernie Sanders.

These two circumstances coupled together, shining on the same night – it’s like the first moon landing. It is a measure of our Future.

The amount of respect and support that Bernie Sanders garnered from so many young people who do not look like him, brings the United States of America to a new plateau in our collective history.

The ‘Sanders Embrace’ is as precedent-setting as the Obama election, when a Black man finally triumphed at the presidential level. The Rumsfeld-Cheney-Bush betrayal was so devastating and so harmful to the United States that hundreds of thousands of racist white people who NEVER would have voted for a Black man, were forced to cast their vote for Obama.

And America reached a new plateau of social enlightenment.

The Sanders Embrace is the other side of the very same coin.

It’s enormous in importance. Young people are not voting their color but are voting their actual interests. Women are not voting their gender. They were not locked up for Hilary. Black leadership was all for Hilary, yet young people of color from coast to coast said, “Wait a minute. Bernie’s making too much sense. We’re with Bernie.” Young people – Black, brown and white, of all gender persuasions listened, analyzed and went with Bernie. This movement toward substance, consistent effort and the genuine is a phenomenal milestone in the country’s history. It’s a beautiful sight to behold.

Bernie Unity.

Who would ever have thought that so many young people of every race, creed and color would get the message of brains, integrity and unity just as Trump is trying to divide and conquer. Trying to send the country backward to its worst days of racism, fear and blatant bigotry.

Bernie’s supporters did not let preconceived notions or appearances stop their intelligence. Bernie Sanders does not look like them and that did not matter. A 74-year old Jewish man became the beneficiary of the Under-40 Folk’s brains, heart and as a result, he was able to force Hillary to run a better, more relevant and more informed campaign. Bernie’s Army served notice the American people are sick and tired of self-serving politics. The Future America will hold everyone accountable from the pesticide laden dinner table, to the mean streets of privatized prisons filled with Black men, to Big Oil’s grip on climate lies and pollution from sea to shining sea – they’re not gonna take it anymore. They’re doing all the required reading, taking all the names and they will have a government that does its job for the People.

The Sanders Embrace and enlightened supporters are wildly needed right now. To her credit, Hillary said Bernie ran ‘an extraordinary campaign.’  Hilary got it right again when she said the questions and issues Bernie raised made for a better race.

Trump is a temporarily powerful dunce. He is only powerful because his simple answers appeal to other dunces. His campaign is shining an x-ray spotlight on just how many fellow Americans in this country are actually incredibly stupid and gullible. They are also small and afraid.  They are his base, God help us. But we must help them.  We must get the right lollipops, pacifiers and easy lines to feed them. They are political babies and the biggest, nastiest, most spoiled baby in politics is their leader.

Trumpy Boy Blue                           

Hilary needs to be a woman for all times.

With Bernie’s help she will. Her greatest concept and strength was summed up in one line when she said, “Bridges are better than walls.”

This is a telling, challenging time. Donald Trump’s complete lack of professional substance, utter inability to repeat the same lie twice, hate-baiting disrespect for minorities and women, his constant bragging and pathological pretending that he’s  talented is as scary as we’ve seen in a long time. Lucky for us, we live in America and Americans can’t stand phonies and hypocrites.

And Trumpy Boy Blue is quite guilty on all counts.  

But Bernie’s swinging for the fences and speaks for the ages.

“The struggle continues.”  He said it twice.

That phrase is from the one of the greatest Black liberation fights of all time. Many will recognize the Portuguese original: A luta continua – fresh from the history of Mozambique and the charge led by Samora Machel’s FRELIMO Independence Movement to get that African country and its riches back from Portugal’s colonial rulers.

You go Bernie.

He’s got his own liberation movement well underway and the plan calls for action beyond November’s election. If the White House is no longer the seat of progress, then genuine innovation will come from the stands. Hilary will be inside the White House and real change will be guided by the People outside.

Rapper Black Thought Talks “Roots, Rock, Run” Race And The Benefits Of A Good Run

(AllHipHop News) Black Thought, of the legendary Hip-Hop collective The Roots, recently sat down with AllHipHop.com to discuss the annual “Roots, Rock, Run” by the Grassroots Community Foundation.

The legendary rapper helped create the 5K walk/run, which takes place each year in his hometown of Philadelphia, to promote health and wellness in the local community.

It is one of several events hosted by The Grassroots Community Foundation, an organization started by Black Thought along with Dr. Janice Johnson Dias, who also serve’s as the non-profit’s President.

The Grassroots Community Foundation is in its third year of raising funds for programs at Anna L. Lingelbach Elementary in Germantown.

“The benefits of a run for anybody is better mental focus and better blood circulation,” Black Thought told AllHipHop.com’s Chuck Creekmur, who participated in the most recent Grassroots Race, on June 4.

“It’s good for your heart and good for your peace of mind,” Black Thought added.

Former Boxer Willie D (Geto Boys) Remembers Muhammad Ali

Editor’s note: Willie D is a member of the legendary platinum-selling rap group the Geto Boys, and writes Ask Willie D, a top-rated weekly advice column that appears in the Houston Presseach Thursday. He is a former boxer and aficionado of the sport who in part credits his confidence in his own abilities to Muhammad Ali. This post originally appeared in African-American News & Issues, June 10, 2016.

When I heard that Muhammad Ali had died, tears welled up in my eyes, and my heart became heavy. I knew this day would come sooner or later — we all knew. But what a remarkably courageous fight he put up to stay with us for as long as he did after being diagnosed with a disease that would eventually claim victory over his life. The boxing icon died at the age of 74 on Friday, June 3, at a Phoenix-area hospital after being admitted for respiratory complications following a 35-year battle with Parkinson’s Disease. As a former boxer and lifelong boxing enthusiast, I can recall countless moments of Ali’s greatness in the ring, even in defeat. Unlike today, where any ole bum might qualify for a shot at a world heavyweight title, and possibly win, Ali competed in an era that serves as the standard for boxing greatness. He fought the crème de la crème of heavyweights, guys who made the average Joe think to himself, “I could never do that. That guy would kill me.”

He annihilated the highly favored and skilled Sonny Liston to win his first title at the tender age of 22, then went on to have epic battles with boxing greats Joe Frazier, George Foreman, Ken Norton, and Larry Holmes, beating them all except Holmes. Not taking anything away from Holmes, but the Holmes fight don’t really count because it was a money grab. Ali had passed his prime, his motor skills were slower, and his speech had already begun to slur due to being in the early stages of his illness.

Dissonant to my childhood friend, three-time boxing world champion Reggie “Sweet” Johnson, I was not always an Ali fan. When he fought Leon Spinks the first time in February 1978, I didn’t like Ali because of his penchant for bragging. So I was ecstatic when Spinks beat him. However, the celebration was short lived because just seven months later, Ali regained his crown, defeating Spinks with a 15-round unanimous decision. About this time is when I began to warm up to Ali as a fighter. You see, coming from where I’m from, Fifth Ward, one of the toughest neighborhoods in Houston and a place Ali frequented when he lived here, you get used to making adjustments. Consequently, I respected Ali’s ability to rededicate himself to his craft to achieve victory.

The more I watched Ali, the more I gravitated towards his energy. Yeah, he was a big talker, but so are most fighters. The difference was Ali could back it up with frequent precision, plus he was entertaining. Muhammad Ali could have likely ran a Fortune 500 Company. He was a marketing genius who could sell a white suit to a mechanic. We wanted to hear what rhyme he would bless us with next and we wanted to see if his prediction to knock out his opponent in a designated round would hold up. It didn’t matter if you were a supporter or detractor, we were all were punch drunk off of the phenomenon known as Muhammad Ali. Shortly after becoming a fan of Ali the boxer, I began to study him and became enamored with Ali the man. Ali’s talent in the ring earned him respect, but what he did outside the ring earned him endearment, and is the reason why there is such an outpouring of international tributes from world leaders, celebrities, fans, and even his opponents. In a world where many people shamelessly choose commerce over conscious with alacrity, Ali remained fundamentally rooted in his beliefs. Sure he was a great boxer, but what impressed me, and other Ali admirers most about him was his moral absolutes, and his willingness to accept whatever consequences came with them. In 1966, the year I was born, and two years after upsetting Sonny Liston, Ali announced that he would not enter the United States military to serve in the Vietnam War because of his religious beliefs. As a result, he was eventually arrested and found guilty of draft evasion, and stripped of his title. Although an appeals court ruled in his favor four years later, he lost some of the best years of his career for the decision, not to mention millions of dollars. In 2002, when Ali received an invitation by the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce to have his star itched in the ground, he initially declined the offer, stating [that] out of respect for the Prophet Muhammad he didn’t want his name to be walked on by “people who have no respect for me.” The star was subsequently mounted on a wall just off the Walk of Fame, near the entrance of the Dolby Theater where the Academy Awards are held each year. Ali not only spoke up for black people. He was a voice and a beacon of hope for the poor, the underserved, and disenfranchised communities around the world. He often fought in under developed countries, in some measure to bring awareness to them. He was a humanitarian and philanthropist who made international trips as a goodwill ambassador to tumultuous countries on behalf of the United States. Following Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in which American hostages were captured, in 1990, Ali used his influence to travel to Iraq on his own accord to negotiate the successful release of 15 American hostages. Ali was one of the few celebrities, black or otherwise, who had the courage to speak out against racism and inequality in America. He showed star athletes, and all celebrities that we didn’t have to just take the money and run. He taught us that we could use our platforms to bring awareness to social injustices, be a voice for the voiceless, and unite people. What made Ali so admired was not the fact that he had the grit to speak out, it was how much he had to lose, how well he articulated his message, and the backdrop to which he first began to speak out. This was a demonically dangerous time in American history: the turbulent ’60s, a time when lynching a black person was considered to be a social event, and civil rights leaders were being assassinated left and right. Because he cared, he dared not to be silent about human suffering. I’m a dreamer. Like many people, I have those crazy reoccurring dreams of falling, flying, being chased, and losing my teeth. I don’t know what they are supposed to mean, but I do know the meaning of one dream that I can’t shake. It’s the same one Ali had. The one where all humankind is united through faith and love. Muhammad Ali fought one helluva fight in doing his part in getting us closer to the manifestation of that dream. Now the final bell has rung for the Greatest of All Time, but he will never be counted out. Rest easy, champ! Ali’s public memorial service from Louisville’s KFC Yum! Center begins at 1 p.m. today and will be streamed live by several news organizations, including CBS News. Follow Willie D on Twitter and Instagram @WillieDLive

Cam Newton’s Limited Edition “Dabbing” Bobblehead Unveiled (PHOTOS)

(AllHipHop News) Cam Newton announced this week that he is done doing the Dab.

Even though the NFL MVP did not create the Hip-Hop dance started in Atlanta, Newton’s go-to 2015 post-touchdown celebration certainly helped make it so popular that coaches, newscasters, and even presidential candidate Hillary Clinton have been seen dipping their heads into their elbows.

For those fans that want to commemorate the death of the Carolina Panther quarterback’s triumphant dance move, the National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum has unveiled the new dabbing Cam Newton bobblehead.

Only 504 of the individually numbered Cam bobbleheads were created. The NFL and NFLPA approved limited edition collectible is available for $40 plus shipping at www.BobbleheadHall.com.

“It’s been fun watching Cam ascend to being one of the premier players in the NFL, both on and off the field. When we continued to see how popular the ‘Dab’ became in all levels of sports and pop culture, we knew a bobblehead of Cam doing the ‘Dab’ had to be made!” said Phil Sklar, Co-Founder and CEO of the National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum.

The National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum will feature the world’s largest collection of bobbleheads and bobblehead-related exhibits. Headquartered in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the facility is expected to open later this year.

Check out photos of  the “Dabbing” Cam Newton Bobblehead in the gallery below.

Bow Wow Lost His Virginity At What Age?

Bow Wow has been doing a lot of talking lately…. maybe too much. The kid is talented; he’s just an interesting fella. He recently opened up the VladTV about adjusting to fame as a teen especially with all of the women around. Bow touched on having multi-platinum success, selling out arenas, and being around his mentor Jermaine Dupri. Bow Wow said that although girls his age liked him back in the day, he was attracted to older women. He said everything JD had he wanted, including the bad b-tches. Bow Wow also shared that he lost his virginity at age 15 to model Esther Baxter. You know what, we wonder what other women Bow slept with that would surprise us. Bow Wow said he was J. Cole as in he acted like he knew what he was doing but he really didn’t. 15 is kind of young, but some start even younger than that. LOL. When did you start?

Fat Joe Just Dropped Two More Epic Remixes For “All The Way Up”

It wasn’t enough for Fat Joe to drop “All The Way Up” with The Terror Squad. No, Joey Crack out did himself, with his remix to the song with Jay Z.

Well, Fat Joe is doing it not once, but TWO more times with all-new remixes to “All The Way Up.” The latest official versions include a remix by EDM DJ, David Guetta and another version with Daddy Yankee and Nicky Jams.

DAVID GUETTA:

DADDY YANKEE AND NICKY JAM:

Roc-A-Fella Records’ Kareem “Biggs” Burke & DJ Premier Discuss Jay Z’s ‘Reasonable Doubt’ (VIDEO)

(AllHipHop News) On June 25, 1996, one of the most celebrated albums in Hip Hop history was released. Jay Z began his reign as a member of the culture’s list of highly accomplished emcees when Reasonable Doubt hit stores on that date.

The LP celebrates its 20 year anniversary in 2016. There will surely be plenty of events, articles, and moments honoring Hov’s classic debut.

Viceland recently held a Facebook Q&A with two insiders that played a big role in the creation of Reasonable Doubt. Roc-A-Fella Records co-founder Kareem “Biggs” Burke and legendary producer DJ Premier sat down to answer questions from fans.

Watch Kareem “Biggs” Burke and DJ Premier’s interview below.

Desiigner Discusses Teaming With G.O.O.D. Music And Not Having A “Brooklyn Sound” (VIDEO)

(AllHipHop News) Desiigner’s life has completely changed over the last seven months. The Brooklyn native went from a little known rapper to signing with Kanye West’s G.O.O.D. Music label and having the #1 song in America.

Rob Markman caught up with the 19-year-old born Sidney Royel Selby III for Genius. Desiigner discussed his love for sounds.

“Music was always me. Music was just always in me,” said Desiigner. “Everybody knew me from music or knew me from doing something funny with my voice.”

Desiigner also discussed how getting shot helped shaped his decision to stop getting involved in street activities and move into making music. He later explained how “Panda” spread from BK to across the world.

According to the Trap music star, the viral success of “Panda” led to a bidding war among eleven different labels. He eventually connected with Ye’s team.

“I’m in a great squad. G.O.O.D. Music/Def Jam is family. I’m here now,” stated Desiigner.

He continued on why the company eventually added him to the roster, “I gave them the vibe that I was ready to work. I came in the studio with Mike Dean working.”

Markman then turned the conversation to the criticism that Desiigner does not have a “traditional” New York sound. The young artist shared his thoughts on the subject.

“Nobody can put a barrier on music, period. Just cause you come from Brooklyn, you’re supposed to sound like you’re from Brooklyn?” questioned Desiigner. “I don’t know what a Brooklyn sound is.”

Watch “This is Desiigner” below.

YG Discusses Troy Ave Shooting In NYC (VIDEO)

(AllHipHop News) The Irving Plaza shooting involving Troy Ave has been one of the most talked about stories in Hip Hop over the last several weeks. West Coast emcee YG has now given his thoughts on the situation.

YG recently spoke with DJ Self, and the “Why You Always Hatin?” rhymer offered a defense of Troy.

“I feel like this, if I got popped I would have did the same thing.  I would have made my way out that joint period,” said YG. “That’s just reaction.”

Troy claimed he and his bodyguard, Ronald “Banga” McPhatter, were shot by an unnamed individual, and the Brooklyn rhymer fired back at the person. McPhatter was killed. Three other people, including Troy, were injured.

Troy Ave has been charged with attempted murder and weapon possession. He is currently being held without bail.

Watch YG’s interview below.

David Banner Talks Bernie Sanders, Hillary Clinton & Donald Trump (VIDEO)

(AllHipHop News) While Bernie Sanders managed to energize millions of people to take part in the political process, the Vermont senator will not be representing the Democrats in this fall’s presidential election.

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has been named the presumptive nominee of the party, and she is headed toward a match up with Republican businessman Donald Trump.

Rapper/producer David Banner is not a fan of Clinton. The Mississippi raised performer spoke about the state of American politics with Music Choice.

“The Clinton family, the Bush family, and the Reagan family – it’s the same thing all the time,” said Banner. “That’s why I wish it would have at least been Bernie, so we could have a clear-cut choice.”

The creator of the forthcoming album The God Box is not high on Trump either.

“Choosing between Trump – the reality show president, because we’re a reality TV show generation. That’s what we’re getting, somebody that don’t know sh-t about politics. He’s a failure,” added Banner. “At least I know who Trump is. As a black man in America, that’s all I want to know.”

Watch David Banner’s interview below.