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EXCLUSIVE: Master P Makes History Creating First Dubai Trap Record “Where Dat Work At”

Master P is the first American artist to create a Dubai trap record. The King of Hip Hop takes his hustle game to the Middle East. As he takes over the streets of Dubai, clubs and radio, Virgin Radio hottest DJs say this is a game changer for music in Dubai, giving it a street sound with banging club music, making trap music popular in Dubai. Master P is already set to go into the recording studio to do a remix version of the song “Where Dat Work At” with local Dubai artists.

“I’ve always been about doing music with underground artists. My goal is to break the next big Hip Hop artist in Dubai. I have a lot of respect for the Dubai culture and I created this record for all of my fans in the Middle East that’s hungry for some original trap music.” says Master P.

The Ice Cream Man is one of the most popular artists in America with over 75 million records sold, 5 Grammys and a niche for making hit records. No Limit Forever recording artist Master P has created another classic single “Where Dat Work At” with super producer BlaqnMild. It’s blowing up worldwide and will be filming the music video in Dubai which will be followed by the most anticipated album “Going to Dubai”, a limited edition album which will be released December 1st of 2015.

Listen below!

Rick Ross Says Wale And Meek Mill’s Beef Is Over (VIDEO)

Rick Ross has a lot on his plate. Besides opening up Wingstop franchises in different cities and releasing new music, he also has to run his MMG empire. This means playing referee in the on-and-off feud between Meek Mill and Wale. AllHipHop recently caught up with Rozay at the grand opening of his new Harlem location of Wingstop. Despite Meek kicking Wale out of MMG via Twitter, Ross claims that they are “brothers forever.”

“You see it already came and went,” he said. “It’s all about making dope music. Me being as experienced as I am, I feel like them going through that –or whatever you call it–in 10 years when they’re executives they’re gonna be able to give that same game to youngstas like ‘yo I did that before but this is how you do it.'”

The Hood Billionaire rapper also spoke on his upcoming album Black Market, which drops Dec. 4th. He said fans can expect to hear him in his “most comfortable space ever.”

“[It’s] real soulful,” he said. “It’s layered with live music.”

Watch the interview below, where he also dodges answering a question about the rumored make-up and break-up with his fiancee Lira Galore.

 

Blue Ivy Will Be On Coldplay’s New Album

Blue Ivy is getting a head start on her music career. The three-year-old will be a guest feature on Coldplay’s new album A Head Full Of Dreams, the Wall Street Journal reports.

Coldplay’s Chris Martin revealed that Bey and Jay’s daughter will be singing as apart of a choir with his two children.

“The ‘choir’ started with my two kids coming in after school and recording,” Martin said. “We recorded Blue Ivy Carter in New York when her mom Beyoncé was in the studio.”

The British rock collective also has a track with Blue Ivy’s mom titled “Hymn for the Weekend,” which Martin said was inspired for by  DJ Snake and Lil’ Jon’s “Turn Down For What?”

“The original kernel was that I was listening to Flo Rida or something, and I thought, it’s such a shame that Coldplay could never have one of those late-night club songs, like ‘Turn Down for What,” Martin said. “What would we call it if we had one? I thought I’d like to have a song called ‘Drinks on Me’ where you sit on the side of a club and buy everyone drinks because you’re so f###### cool. I was chuckling about that, when this melody came — ‘drinks on me, drinks on me’ — then the rest of the song came out. I presented it to the rest of the band and they said, ‘We love this song, but there’s no way you can sing ‘drinks on me.’ So that changed into ‘drink from me’ and the idea of having an angelic person in your life. Then that turned into asking Beyoncé to sing on it.”

Blue Ivy has appeared on past albums from both her parents on the tracks “Blue” by Beyonce and Jay Z’s “Glory.”

Vince Staples Announces ‘Circa 06’ Tour

Vince Staples has announced that he will be spreading his west coast vibes soon on his upcoming tour. The “Senorita” rapper will be performing in cites for his “Circa ’06” tour, VIBE reports.

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Kicking off on Dec. 2nd in Philadelphia, the 22-year-old will be tearing down stages in cities like Toronto, Chicago, San Francisco and Denver before wrapping up the three-month trek in March in Louisville, KY.

Tickets are available for purchase here. Peep the dates below.

12-02 PHILADELPHIA, PA – UNION TRANSFER
12-03 WASHINGTON, DC – U STREET MUSIC HALL
12-04 TORONTO, ONTARIO – TATTOO
12-05 MONTREAL, QUÉBEC – LE BELMONT
12-06 BOSTON, MA – MIDDLE EAST DOWNSTAIRS
12-09 BROOKLYN, NY – MUSIC HALL OF WILLIAMSBURG
12-11 MADISON, WI – THE SETT @ UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN
12-12 IOWA CITY, IA – IMU BALLROOM @ UNIVERSITY OF IOWA
12-13 MINNEAPOLIS, MN – FINE LINE MUSIC CAFÉ
12-15 CHICAGO, IL – BOTTOM LOUNGE
12-18 SANTA ANA, CA – THE OBSERVATORY
12-19 SAN DIEGO, CA – OBSERVATORY NORTH PARK
02-26 SAN FRANCISCO, CA – SOCIAL HALL
02-28 PORTLAND, OR – HAWTHORNE THEATRE
03-01 VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – VOGUE THEATRE
03-02 SEATTLE, WA – NEPTUNE THEATER
03-04 SALT LAKE CITY, UT – THE COMPLEX
03-05 DENVER, CO – BLUEBIRD THEATRE
03-07 OMAHA, NE – SLOWDOWN
03-08 MILWAUKEE, WI – THE RAVE II
03-09 COLUMBUS, OH – A&R MUSIC BAR
03-11 INDIANAPOLIS, IN – DELUXE
03-12 LOUISVILLE, KY – HEADLINERS

Meek Mill Returns With Extreme Heat On Creed-Inspired Song

Meek Mill is back! The new song “Lord Knows” hails from the movie “Creed” and reminds us why we love Meek. Set in gritty Philly gyms, the Spike Lee-directed visual represents the other side of the rap game that’s often gets lost in the glam and glitz.

Nick Grant Spits Crazy Freestyle On ‘Sway In The Morning’ (VIDEO)

South Carolina-born, Atlanta-based emcee Nick Grant is quickly building a buzz as one of the rising Hip Hop artists to keep an eye on. Grant first made a huge splash on the scene with a freestyle on Sway In The Morning, and the spitter returned to the Shade 45 program to bless the mic again. Check out Nick Grant’s freestyle in the video below.

Jadakiss Names His Top 5 Rappers Dead Or Alive (VIDEO)

(AllHipHop News) New York spitter Jadakiss is releasing his first studio album in 6 years today (November 20). The Lox member’s Top 5 Dead or Alive arrives the same week when Hip Hop has been having a discussion about the greatest emcees of all time (thanks to a controversial article on Billboard).

[ALSO READ: Snoop Dogg Blasts Billboard’s “10 Greatest Rappers Of All Time” List]

Kiss stopped by Ebro In The Morning to promote his new LP. The conversation included the “Ain’t Nothin New” rhymer sharing his personal Top 5 DOA.

“My top 5 always changes, but a random one that can always come off the head is Notorious B.I.G, Nas, Hov, my brother Styles P, Tupac Shakur,” revealed Jadakiss.

Top 5 Dead or Alive features a crop of rap heavyweights. Kiss recruited Styles, Sheek Louch, Nas, Puff Daddy, Jeezy, Lil Wayne, Future, Wiz Khalifa, Young Buck, Swizz Beatz, and Nipsey Hussle for his fourth official offering.

[ALSO READ: Jadakiss Joins Barbershop Debate On Top 5 Emcees Dead Or Alive (VIDEO)]

Watch Jadakiss’ interview below.

‘Creed’ Soundtrack Features Future, Meek Mill, The Roots, Joey Bada$$, Jhené Aiko & More (TRACKLIST)

(AllHipHop News) Creed is set to hit theaters on November 25. The next installment in the Rocky movie franchise centers around Apollo Creed’s son (Michael B. Jordan) stepping into the ring, but music also plays a big part in the film.

[ALSO READ: Michael B. Jordan Talks Starring In ‘Creed’ & Rumors Of Dating Iggy Azalea And Kendall Jenner (VIDEO)]

Fans can now purchase the official soundtrack to Creed with appearances by some of the biggest names in music. The collection’s lead single – “Last Breath” – is from Atlanta rhymer Future. Meek Mill, The Roots, Joey Bada$$, Nas, 2Pac, Vince Staples, Donald Glover, Tory Lanez, Jhené Aiko, and more also make appearances on the project.

Tessa Thompson stars in Creed as singer-songwriter Bianca. The real life member of the band Caught A Ghost has three songs on the soundtrack as well.

Creed (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is available on iTunes. Check out the tracklist and movie trailer below.

[ALSO READ: Future Releases “Last Breath” Inspired By The ‘Rocky’ Sequel ‘Creed’ (AUDIO)]

Creed Soundtrack Tracklist

1. Last Breath – Future
2. Check – Meek Mill
3. Intolerant – White Dave
4. The Fire – The Roots (feat. John Legend)
5. Grip – Tessa Thompson
6. Lord Knows – Meek Mill (feat. Tory Lanez)
7. Don’t Waste My Time – Krept & Konan
8. Let You Know – White Dave (feat. Clif Soulo & Legendvry)
9. Breathe – Tessa Thompson
10. Wake Up Everybody – Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes
11. Bridging the Gap – Nas (feat. Olu Dara)
12. Waiting for My Moment – Donald Glover, Jhené Aiko, Vince Staples & Ludwig Göransson
13. Hail Mary – 2Pac
14. In the Kitchen – White Dave (feat. Young T & Kells)
15. Shed You – Tessa Thompson & Moses Sumney
16. Curry Chicken – Joey Bada$$
17. Work Ya Muscle – Eearz
18. Lord Knows/Fighting Stronger – Meek Mill, Jhené Aiko & Ludwig Göransson

50 Cent Announces Release Date For ‘The Kanan Tape’

(AllHipHop News) 50 Cent is looking to start the holiday season off with a new gift for his fans. The Queens rapper has announced his next project The Kanan Tape will arrive on November 26.

[ALSO READ: 50 Cent To Release A New Project Called ‘The Kanan Tape’?]

50 shared the news via Instagram. He wrote, “Now you know, The Kanan Tape will be out everywhere Thanksgiving Day!!!!”

This will be 50’s first release since Animal Ambition dropped in 2014. The G-Unit boss is also working on the long-delayed Street King Immortal album. He recently logged in studio time with Atlanta-based producer Zaytoven.

Now you know, the KANAN TAPE WILL BE OUT EVERY WHERE THANKSGIVING DAY!!!! ? #EFFENVODKA #FRIGO #SMSAUDIO

A photo posted by 50 Cent (@50cent) on

[ALSO READ: 50 Cent Working With Zaytoven On ‘Street King Immortal’ (VIDEO)]

Derek Jeter Responds To Reports He Said 50 Cent Was “Too Urban” For Underwear Deal

(AllHipHop News) 50 Cent found himself clashing with yet another celebrity this week when reports started to circulate that New York Yankees great Derek Jeter turned down a deal because 50 Cent was involved. Allegedly, Jeter ended a business partnership with Frigo underwear, because he felt 50 was “too urban” for the brand.

[ALSO READ: Derek Jeter Left Frigo Underwear Because 50 Cent Joined; 50 Responds]

The 14-time MLB All-star has now addressed the reports. Jeter told Page Six he did not have a problem with 50 joining the Frigo campaign, and he was actually the one that orchestrated the arrangement.

“I facilitated the introductory meeting between 50 Cent and the company, so it makes absolutely no sense that I would object to 50 Cent being a Frigo brand ambassador or think that 50 Cent is ‘too urban’ for the brand,” stated Jeter.

Frigo’s parent company RevolutionWear supposedly filed a lawsuit against Jeter, claiming the Swedish business lost $30 million when the World Series champion decided not to endorse Frigo. Jeter accused RevolutionWear CEO Mathias Ingvarsson of purposely threatening litigation and conducting a smear campaign against him because the company began having financial troubles.

“It is unfortunate that Mr. Ingvarsson continues to make false claims and bad decisions with respect to RevolutionWear Inc.,” continued Jeter.

Page Six reports Jeter has filed his own lawsuit against RevolutionWear for making malicious statements. Jeter also claims to have documents that prove Ingvarsson was aware he never agreed to be a spokesperson or ambassador for the brand.

[ALSO READ: Jay Z, Michael Jordan, Action Bronson + More Pay Respects To Derek Jeter In New Commercial (VIDEO)]

Charlotte’s Own Tang Shows His Growth As An Artist With ‘Wudy Vs. Tang’

Charlotte, N.C.’s own Tang has been making waves on the Hip Hop scene. His talents have equipped him to not only be one of Charlotte’s top underground artist, but a well-known artist throughout North Carolina. Growing up in an urban neighborhood, with both parents in the household, Tang began writing lyrics at an early age. Tang originally went by Wudy (a childhood nickname), and now goes by Tang. This represents the growth from a child to a man. The loss of his brother, inspired Tang to focus more on his music. Tang, still remembers the talks him and his brother had of them making it to the top. With his brother gone, he had no choice but to go persevere to reach the top! Despite that rough spot in his life, he didn’t give up.

With a writing utensil laying around and scrap paper he can write you a song in minutes! The distinct beats that are used in his music have set him apart from many, and his mastered craft speaks for itself. Tang’s, music has seen production from Wade, Ace Bunkin, Trill Phill, Slim Hood, Zaybo, Dj Xaeski and Dior Rage. He has been influenced by Tupac, T.I., UGK, Boosie, Jeezy and Gucci Mane. He decided to let their journeys motivate him to not allow the projects to define his future. Tang also lost his friend DJ Xaeski. This put a two year hold on his music. Tang is now back and more focused on his music than ever. Knowing where he came from, and where he is today has allowed him to be one of the hottest artists in the city. Take a listen to his mixtape ‘Wudy Vs. Tang’ and the single “Me” below!

Connect with Tang:
Twitter: @whodafuckistang
Instagram: @ihateTang

Meek Mill Fans Flood Drake’s Instagram Page With Tree Emojis (PHOTOS)

(AllHipHop News) Back when Drake and Future dropped their joint project What A Time To Be Alive, Drizzy’s followers took that as an opportunity to clown Meek Mill on Instagram by posting diamond emojis all over his page. Meek’s fans are now returning the favor against Drake.

[ALSO READ: Drake & Future Fans Clown Meek Mill On IG; Meek Says It’s “F*ck Boy Season” (PHOTOS)]

The Maybach Music Group member revealed the cover art to his upcoming Dreamchasers 4 mixtape. The artwork features bills folded into a shape resembling a tree, so Instagram users flooded Drake’s page with thousands of tree emojis.

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The situation is the result of the Meek versus Drake feud that played out this summer. Most observers believed the OVO founder came out the winner, but it appears Meek may still have a strong base of support despite the perceived loss in the battle with Drake.

[ALSO READ: Meek Mill’s Associate Omelly Warns People To “Stop Playing” With The DreamChasers]

Check out the comment section of Drake’s Instagram posts in the gallery below.

Wiz Khalifa Working On Cabin Fever 3

While Wiz pushes that “King of Everything” record, the homie continues his travels around the globe smoking the best and recording his music. So is the life of the Taylor Gang leader, who finds himself giving the Taylors a pep talk before his show with Curren$y and The Jets among other things. He records, he shoots some hoops, he kicks it with Berner, he gets money and all that good stuff. Hit play and enjoy below.

Jimmy Iovine Gets In Hot Water Over “Girls” Comments

Jimmy Iovine is a business titan, but the mogul is under fire for suggesting that women don’t know how to find music.

The Beats founder /Apple Music exec made the odd remarks on CBS This morning with Mary J. Blige right there. “Women find it very difficult at times — some women — to find music,” Iovine said.

Iovine seemed to try explaining an Apple Music commercial with Mary J. Blige, Kerry Washington and Taraji P. Henson, but the reference fell flat.

The commercial in question was directed by Ava DuVernay and it humorously explains curated playlists on Apple Music.

Iovine explained, “I just thought of a problem, you know? Girls are sitting around, you know, talking about boys. Or complaining about boys, you know, when they’re heartbroken or whatever. And they need music for that, right? So it’s hard to find the right music, you know. Not everybody has the right lists, or knows a DJ or something.”
Julianne Escobedo Shepherd, among many others, took Iovine to task for his comments.

I have never met Mr. Iovine, but I have been writing about music as a profession for many, many years, and one of my favorite things to do is to “find” music,” Shepherd said. “Before I started writing about music, I was capable of finding it as well. It certainly sounds like a conundrum, impossible I know, but it happens. If only Apple Music’s premise was not sexist at its very core, I might subscribe to it.”


Iovine has since apologized since he began trending on social media.

Chicago Native Responds To Chief Keef Included In Teacher’s Lesson Plan

Chicago Public Schools have recently heavily criticized for hiring a substitute teacher who taught a lesson centered on Chief Keef to sixth-graders at Fiske Elementary School. This is an editorial addressing the issues surrounding it.

“While teachers have flexibility in making assignments, CPS requires them to provide age-appropriate material in the classroom.” With consideration to this statement provided by CPS one cannot help but consider how age appropriate content is evaluated in the context of at-risk youth and equally at-risk communities? The youth who attend Fiske Elementary, who are being reported as seemingly fragile, timid, and almost aloof to the times, enter and exit their elementary school into rival gang territory daily. Not only are these adolescents significantly at-risk and statistically postured to fall victim to community ills such as gang participation, violence, and death they are very aware of these circumstances.

The same 11 year old male outraged by the idea of music education that detailed the origins of Keith Cozart p/k/a Chief Keef is likely very aware of the recent execution style murder of 9 year old Tyshawn Lee in the same way my 9 year old son is cognizant of the circumstance and various casualties often associated with marginalized life in Chicago. Am I to assume, per your article, that my son and various other young black children should not be introduced to the potential circumstances of their environment before they are met with them? Is it also fair to say students at Fiske should be sheltered from knowing Cottage Grove, that lies adjacent to their school, is an epicenter of death and mortality for young men and women of color? Or is it safer to educate and equip them with life skills so they are somewhat prepared to face and counter the harsh realities of the communities they call home?

What I find troubling about the article is the voice it takes with regard to the legitimacy of the lesson on Chief Keef being deemed as music education and also the voice of the writers who I am willing to bet have never lived in Englewood or even driven through the community aside from work obligation. Yet, have a penchant for the crucifixion of Chief Keef who doesn’t live in Chicago anymore. Chief Keef who we met as a misguided youth troubled by the same cycle of violence that many of us who stem from at-risk communities face or faced. Chief Keef a product of both Chicago and Chicago Public Schools who despite his troubled past has still made significant progress considering the numerous odds he prevailed from.

Yes, you most certainly can find several expletives in any of his music and depiction of numerous societal ills but who are we to discount his voice in telling the story of his life and where he comes from? Not everyone grew up with the luxury of a two parent home or even a home for that matter. We did not all stem from families bonded by love, protection, and guidance. Like Keef, many of us grew up in environments where the sentiment was kill or be killed and we knew this as soon as we exited our doors. In some cases safety was not even available in the places we called home.

Even more bothersome, in the article, is the perpetuation of the idea that at-risk youth are detached from Chief Keef and his music. The article reads as if the substitute teacher introduced a group of naïve youth to an artist they had never heard of when music statistics and online data represent this very population as core individuals that listen to Rap, Hip Hop, and Drill Music. I am a Music Executive approaching 35 years of age and can confirm I do not listen to Chief Keef. In fact many of my peers do not consider his music their cup of tea but what we know to be true is a significant number of youth under age 15 of all nationalities are in tune with all things Chief Keef.

These are the young people locating resources to obtain his music through their parents, pirating, or any other medium that provides them access. These are the people that construct his million plus followings across social media platforms. White, Asian, Latino, and Black youth stand in long lines to meet and greet Chief Keef despite the stigmas associated with him. They are fascinated by him and want to hear what he has to say. They cry for the opportunity to even be in his presence in the exact same way I cried to see NWA, Public Enemy, Rakim, and Pac when I was their age.

These youth recite explicit lyrics in full in the exact same way I recited Biggie’s Ready to Die and Bone Thug’s Creepin on ah Come Up in 1994 or better yet Dr. Dre’s The Chronic in 1992. It is not uncommon for me to witness children recite lyrics from artists that range from Chief Keef to Lil Durk to Drake to Future and beyond. While I cannot necessarily say it makes me proud to witness a young person recite the lyrics of Katie Got Bandz’s Lil B#### I am not so detached from reality that I forget I was one of these young people and engaged with the artists of my time who were pegged as troubled community culprits and vagrants.

While serving at-risk youth, communities, and many of Chicago’s most troubled schools I witnessed youth openly recite full Waka Flocka lyrics yet fail to recite vocabulary words. I witnessed youth complain about lack of relevancy in their academic content and youth who were in high school who could not read or write at an elementary grade level. I personally witnessed student after student fall through the academic pipeline. We lost some to truancy, some to gangs, some to violence, and many to incarceration. I never witnessed any young person indicate Waka Flocka as their inspiration for going hard in the paint or as their muse to unlawfully carry a weapon. I never witnessed a juvenile judge ask them if Wacka influenced their decision. Today’s at-risk young men and women simply do not have the luxury of remembering what any artist said when their lives are placed at-risk and self-preservation outweighs anything else.

I have a true lack of experience of ever witnessing at-risk youth, specifically in Chicago; recite their learnings of Mozart, Beethoven, Bach, Stravinsky or Davis (Miles) for that matter. What I have witnessed is significantly at-risk youth recite the outdated teachings of prejudiced textbooks and learnings that misrepresent historical data as it relates to their culture and numerous others. As an example, there are still textbooks that reference Thanksgiving and the idea of it being a peaceful example of race relations in America. These same texts also make the misrepresentation that Christopher Columbus discovered America, meanwhile many of these youth have active social media accounts and are privy to memes and suggestive tweets from celebrities and beyond who publicly refute these same theories.

Are there any efforts to reteach history so they are cognizant of the atrocities that shape America or are we to assume they will learn the truth as they mature and get older assuming they are not murdered or incarcerated before that time? Are we living in a time where it is better to misrepresent or disregard reality because dealing with it is far too complicated and painful?

What I am trying to say is we have to get away from our dismissive behaviors of unrelenting public ridicule and scrutiny of the things we simply do not understand. Maybe we do not understand the teaching trajectory of the substitute teacher because we never set foot inside of a hostile and troubled classroom where the number of students significantly outweighs the ability of the educator to be effective.

Perhaps we have never stepped foot in a school where the school report card reflects a failing grade and students not at grade level. Lastly, maybe we have never met youth who are truly significantly at-risk, the type of students who fail to pay attention during class in open defiance because they lack positive adult interactions and their at home lives prevent them from seeing the possibility of education being their way out.

Experience has taught me that these youth can actually educate us adults by teaching us about gang culture, drugs, bad practices in community policing such as identification cards, profiling, and more. Maybe it is time for us to stop discounting the knowledge and proficiency of our youth and learn from them so we can actively address our communal ills effectively. Is learning about Chief Keef the worst thing that can happen in schools already deemed failing? Is it a lesson that is farfetched when the story of his life is honestly very typical of many inner city youth specifically in Chicago?

Are his contributions to music unworthy because we do not understand the context as it relates to coming from the environment he is from? Or is it not of educational value because his lyrics discuss drugs, sex, money, and violence? Did Marvin Gaye not touch on the same issues in another voice reflective of his time? Did Kurt Kobain not hit us with the same narrative through his voice reflective of his time? Was Amy Winehouse not troubled and at-risk as evidenced through her music? Did we not witness Ice Cube enter rap with messages about “F### the Police” and transition into O’shea Jackson Sr. the man who at present provides quality programming for families and children? In a nutshell, we all start somewhere but it is not where we start that defines us, it’s where we finish.

Maybe Chief Keef has a significant amount of growing to do but let’s allow him to do it. He is still a young man who can transition to become larger than even he imagined. Look at the story of James Brown and his evolution in music and then the story of Michael Jackson and how James Brown, an artist with a criminal past, was his role model and artist icon. If James Brown was able to incite that type of influence and passion into Michael Jackson, who we deem as one of the greatest of all time, if not the greatest, who are we to continue to rag on Chief Keef who has barely scratched the surface of his 20’s?

Are we to hold his failure to comply with child support orders as the final measure of why he does not deserve the same oxygen we breathe? Are we to blame him for the murders and deaths of individuals that he happened to know from the same community as him? If this is the irresponsible way our thinking is set up we are tremendously flawed and doomed as a society.

I too then should be mentioned when people are slain because often times I know the victims and in some cases the perpetrators. I also curse and listen to rap music daily outside of doing yoga and having an addiction to Starbucks, Wholefoods, Social Media, and Target. What a complete waste of life space right? Here I am fortunate enough to have made it out the ghetto and I have the audacity to stoop as low as loving the lyrics to B####, Don’t Kill my Vibe just as much as the ones to Liberation and let’s not forget my penchant for the ratchet! What is life absent a little Young Jeezy and Juicy J?

There are numerous success stories of people who came from nothing and used this circumstance to make their mark on the world. I do not have an expectation for Keef or the young people in that classroom to make their rise to critical acclaim overnight as the road is never easy for any of us that come from this circumstance. What I do expect is for them to learn from this very teachable moment because what it speaks volumes to is our grave inability to effectively reach our youth on any level in school or otherwise. Perhaps the lesson should not be about Keef but where are the lessons on people that look like the students outside of Black History Month? If we can presume they do not see many positive role models in their daily interactions that resemble them is it unfair to think school should introduce them to success stories of individuals that look like them and prevailed against the same odds?

Where are the lessons on James Brown, Marvin Gaye, Nina Simone, Harry Belafonte, and Count Basie? Are they currently in print or will they ever come? Are these lessons not text book worthy because like Keef many of these people stem from troubled pasts and circumstances of poverty? Or am I being presumptuous and am simply unaware that CPS is looking to adopt a life-skills based curriculum that accounts for addressing the out of classroom factors that deter youth from academic achievement. Is CPS looking to make efforts to meet the students more effectively by incorporating new strategy into teaching and materials? Is CPS developing a music curriculum that speaks to the rich historical past of Chicago with respect to all music and it once being a capitol of music?

Nah, I seriously doubt it because remedying issues seems to be the s### they don’t like. It has more entertainment value for media to further exploit issues by poking fun at inadequacies in teaching from a substitute, an individual substituting the real teacher. Have we revisited more pressing matters like the failing grades the school once received and threats of both shut downs and mergers? Are school officials working with local authorities and violence prevention organizations to address the violence and gang issues surrounding the school?

I happen to think this type of material is more worthy of consideration and discussion but what do I know? After all, I just happen to be an adult that came from an at-risk environment who happened to serve at-risk youth and communities, work collaboratively with gangs and the criminal system, and work in the entertainment industry. I don’t know enough considering my background so I should probably leave this subject to you experts because clearly you are out in the trenches as we all sit idle and watch AND Lord knows watching Child’s Play has those students traumatized for life especially since they live in Pleasantville. Insert more sarcasm here.

Ty Dolla $ign And The Taylor Gang Celebrate ‘Free TC’ Release In Style

Since the Ty Dolla $ign album, Free TC hit shelves and online retailers last Friday its been a world wind of events and appearances for Ty Dolla $ign. The homie put together a solid project touching on R&B, Soul, Hip-Hop, Trap, Funk and all elements necessary to show that he truly is the rising star everyone says he is. Ty made it to mainstream success, it’s been a long road, but this past week was time to celebrate enjoy the release of Free TC. Check the pics below with Wiz, the Taylors and the Atlantic team.

Future Drops Video For “Rich Sex” Starring Blac Chyna

Keeping the DS2 visuals coming, Future shoots video for Metro Boomin & Southside produced track “Rich Sex” starring Blac Chyna. Directed by Eif Rivera.

Watch below.