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Daily Word: Happy Birthday Aaliyah (You Are One In A Million!!)

Happy Martin Luther King Day, my Great People!!

If you missed our special Birthday Tribute to Dr. King, please click here. Today, we are celebrating the birthday of one of our other fallen family members. Aaliyah Dana Haughton, born January 16, 1979, was a talented songwriter, performer, actress, who lost her life tragically on August 25, 2001, in a plane crash.

Even though Aaliyah is gone, she will never be forgotten. Her accomplishments at such an early age were astonishing, and she gave us inspiration. She told us that “if at first we don’t succeed, we must pick ourselves up and try again,” as well as how much we were “one in a million.” In commemoration of her birthday, we are dedicating today’s Daily Word to being One in A Million!

In life, you will be confronted with many situations where you don’t totally fit in. You will look around and feel like the odd one out. You will question yourself and wonder what is it about you that you don’t have that everyone else does…. That’s wrong!!! The question you should be asking yourself is what is it about you that everyone else doesn’t have!!

Always remember that you are one in a million! No one on this planet can be you or do what you can do! You were put on this earth to do some extraordinary things, and as long as you keep trying to be like everyone else, you will never accomplish them! You were born to stand out!!! With that in mind, accept that fact that you will never fit it!! You were put here to be the best you that you can possibly be, so never question or take that privilege for granted!! You are One in A Million!!! Stop waiting, and Make your life Great!!!
-Ash’Cash

“You are unique, and if that is not fulfilled, then something has been lost.” -Martha Graham

“Don’t let anyone tell you that you have to be a certain way. Be unique. Be what you feel.” -Melissa Etheridge

“You were born an original. Don’t become a copy.” -Unknown

“Always be a first-rate version of yourself, instead of a second-rate version of somebody else.” -Judy Garland

“If you were meant to be otherwise, Then you would have been created otherwise.” -Johann von Goethe

“They can call me crazy if I fail, all the chance that I need, is one-in-a-million and they can call me brilliant when I succeed.” -Ani Difranco

“Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don’t matter and those who matter don’t mind.” -Dr. Seuss

“If you want to be truly successful invest in yourself to get the knowledge you need to find your unique factor. When you find it and focus on it and persevere your success will blossom.” -Sidney Madwed

TO HEAR THE AUDIO VERSION OF THE DAILY WORD – CLICK HERE.

Ash’Cash is a Business Consultant, Motivational Speaker, Financial Expert and the author of Mind Right, Money Right: 10 Laws of Financial Freedom. For more information, please visit his website, www.IamAshCash.com.

Mixtape Review: Red Cafe’s “Hell’s Kitchen”

Rating: 8/10

With his first official album, Shakedown, coming out this spring, Red Cafe’s new mixtape Hell’s Kitchen is certain to hold fans over as he delivers another album-quality tape with a handful of bangers and guest appearances from 2 Chainz, Wale, J. Cole, Fabolous, Trey Songz, and Meek Mill among others.

The tape begins with the title track, “Hell’s Kitchen” which sets the tone for what’s to come, as Red lets it be known that he “Went to sleep the champ / woke up with the title.” The drum-heavy track is complimented by a high-pitched vocal sample, which is most audible on the hook as Red asks listeners a question by stating “Hell’s Kitchen / What Else?” On the very next track, “His Story,” Red starts off his verse by rapping about putting on for his label, Bad Boy Records (“Mase went to church / I signed to Bad Boy / Got right to work”).

The strong start continues on the remix to the Jahlil Beats produced, “Let It Go.” Red Cafe is joined on the track by Bad Boy boss Diddy as well as label-mate French Montana and takes time to make reference to Will Smith’s character in the movie Bad Boys (“Ain’t been a better bad boy since Mike Lowery”). In the song’s third verse, 2 Chainz then makes the first of his two appearances on the mixtape, continuing to build his momentum in 2012, as it seems like he’s been featured on every mixtape released so far this year.

Trey Songz, Wale, and J. Cole join Red Cafe on the remix to the popular “Fly Together” produced by Ryan Leslie. The song’s feel-good vibe finds each rapper speaking to the ladies on their respective verse and letting them know the luxuries they can experience if they join them; Wale offers first class seats and drinks (“First class seats / Bottles on me”), while J. Cole prefers to invite his woman overseas  (“Come with me, to Madrid that’s where Real play). The song comes together on the chorus, as Trey Songz replaces Ryan Leslie on the hook singing, “When I fly, you fly, we fly together…” As the tape progresses, Red Cafe demonstrates his versatility, especially on “Can You Hear Me,” as he raps about more serious issues including street life, his kids, religion, and even politics.

With an album-type feel to it, Red Cafe’s Hell’s Kitchen joins the growing list of hot mixtapes released so far this year. With his album, Shakedown, on the way this spring, Red Cafe will look to continue to represent well for Bad Boy by continuing to grow the buzz and momentum generated by Hell’s Kitchen.

Checkout AllHipHop’s exclusive interview with Red Cafe and footage from the Hell’s Kitchen listening party below:

Exclusive: The Roots’ Black Thought Ponders Hip-Hop as the Realization of Dr. King’s Dream

“I still have a dream. It is a dream deeply rooted in the American dream…” – Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

For many babies of the ’70s, ’80s, and ’90s – the collective Hip-Hop era – the American Dream that Dr. King so eloquently spoke of back in 1963 has often been just that – a dream. As inner cities swelter with rising rates of violence, unemployment, and despair, it sometimes seems as if we haven’t “overcome” much at all in the nearly 42 years since his tragic assassination.

And yet, for some, Hip-Hop symoblizes – both literally and figuratively – the attainment of the American Dream, and the ultimate “rage against the machine” method for using what we’ve got to get what we want. In fact, it has been said that Hip-Hop music and culture have created more young, Black millionaire Americans than any other industries in our history. Coupled with serving as the voice box of the streets, Hip-Hop plus wealth equals power in 2012.

Rapper Black Thought of the legendary Roots crew has surely seen his life change dramatically in the 25 years since the inception of his critically-acclaimed rap group. His humble, early rap days in Philly are a far cry from where his longevity and success in rap have landed him as of late. AllHipHop.com spent the evening at the lovely home of the self-proclaimed “hometown hero” MC (along with the talented young duo that make up his newly co-signed group, The Wurxs), and asked if he thinks Hip-Hop is Dr. King’s dream personified – and at what costs?:

Want more Black Thought? Check back all this week for a daily dose of wise thoughts from one of the illest MCs alive! And hear more from The Wurxs!

Scientist Names Rare Horse Fly After Beyoncé; California Marijuana Strain Named After Blue Ivy

Over the years, Beyoncé Knowles has amassed numerous honors in the world of music. Now the chart-topping vocalist can add another, as her name has been given to a previously un-named species of horsefly.

According to csironewsblog.com, the horse fly’s golden lower abdomen prompted Australian National Insect Collection researcher/ Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) scientist Bryan Lessard to officially “describe” the fly as Scaptia (Plinthina) beyonceae.

“It was the unique dense golden hairs on the fly’s abdomen that led me to name this fly in honour of the performer Beyoncé as well as giving me the chance to demonstrate the fun side of taxonomy – the naming of species,” Lessard said.

Sharing a name isn’t the only thing Knowles has in common with the horse fly. The site reports that the Scaptia (Plinthina) beyonceae, a rare species, was collected in 1981, the same year Beyoncé was born, from north-east Queensland’s Atherton Tablelands, together with two other previously unknown specimens.

Beyoncé’s inclusion in the insect world follows recent news surrounding her new daughter, Blue Ivy Carter. TMZ states that several weed dispensaries in Hollywood are selling a new strain of marijuana called “OG Blue Ivy.” At this time, Beyoncé and her husband, Jay-Z, have not issued a legal notice to the dispensaries regarding this situation.

Read more about the Scaptia (Plinthina) beyonceae horsefly species on the sites below:

http://csironewsblog.com/2012/01/13/a-golden-tail-of-beyonces-bootylicious-fly/

http://www.eurweb.com/2012/01/australian-scientists-rename-rare-horse-fly-after-beyonce/

Ol’ Dirty MLK: America’s Most Wanted

“I said it before and I’ll still taunt it/ Every young brotha with a color is most wanted.” -“Amerikkka’s Most Wanted”, Ice Cube

He was considered by some the most dangerous man in America. He spent many nights locked up in jail cells. There were constant attempts made on his life. During his last years, he was constantly harassed by law enforcement. The real reason for his untimely demise before the age of 40 still remains a mystery. I’m not talking about Grammy-nominated rapper Russell “Ol’ Dirty Bastard” Jones,” I’m talking about Nobel Peace Prize winner, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr…

Although many people today celebrate Dr. King as one of the greatest American heroes, that was not always the case. According to historian Taylor Branch in his book, Pillar of Fire, former FBI director J. Edgar Hoover referred to King as not only a “tom cat with obsessive degenerate sexual urges,” but a “notorious liar,” and “one of the lowest characters in the country” – in the Hip-Hop vernacular, “an ol’ dirty bastard.”

For most people who are only familiar with Dr. King via the overplayed “I Have a Dream Speech,” this may come as quite a shock. How could a man of peace who only wanted “this nation to rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed” become Public Enemy #1?

In reality, King was a lot closer to the ideologies of “militants” such as Malcolm X and Kwame Ture (Stokley Carmichael), especially in his later years, than many people would like to admit. This fact, however, has not been lost on Hip-Hop, as even the most revolutionary rappers such as Public Enemy, Immortal Technique and Rakim have all paid homage to him in their songs.

The real Martin Luther King Jr is captured in the parts of his speeches and writings that have been whited-out of high school history books. Most people don’t know that in his last speech, ” I See the Promised Land,” delivered in Memphis the night before he was assassinated, he called for a boycott of Coca Cola, Sealtest Milk, and Wonder Bread, and also asked that Black people transfer their money from White banks to Black ones.

Nor do they know that, although he is portrayed as the great integrationist, King was as just a strong of an advocate of Black Pride as ODB was of “Knowledge of Self.” In his work, Where Do We Go from Here, King defines Black Power as “a psychological reaction to the psychological indoctrination that led to the creation of the perfect slave.” Also, although some only associate Dr. King with songs like “We Shall Overcome,” Dead Prez once sampled one of his “missing” speeches where he proclaimed , “Yes I’m Black..I’m proud of it…I’m Black and beautiful!”

This is the Dr. King that many hated; the one who dissed President Lyndon Johnson’s war in Vietnam by saying that “we have been wrong from the beginning in Vietnam, we have been detrimental to the life of the Vietnamese people.” (Which was just a nicer way of putting Muhammad Ali’s statement that “no Vietcong ever called him the N-word.”)

These are the types of voices that many in this country have always wanted silenced.

Now does that mean that at some point, ODB might have stopped a Wu-Tang concert and spoken out against George Bush’s “War on Terror?”

We will never know, but wild boys do wild things.

Ol’ Dirty Bastard from the Wu-Tang Clan portrait
Credit: WENN

Remember, in an AllHipHop interview conducted shortly after his release from prison, ODB accused George Bush and the government of trying to kill him. While most people wrote this off as the paranoid ramblings of someone suffering from too many years of drug abuse, history makes us take another look. As they say in Greek mythology, “those who the gods wish to destroy, they first drive mad.”

It is no secret that the FBI bugged Dr. King’s hotel rooms and, allegedly, had tapes of him “gettin’ his freak on” with women which they delivered to his wife in an effort to push him to commit suicide.

Also, according to Clay Risen in his book, A Nation on Fire, before his assassination in Memphis, ” the 111th Military Intelligence Group had been keeping tabs on King and the SCLC for signs of an impending riot.” Also, Risen states that on the day of his murder, anti-riot operations were already put in place by the Army Operations Center “before his death was even confirmed.”

Even Rev. Jesse Jackson wrote in the forward of King’s “alleged” assassin, James Earl Ray’s book, Who Killed Martin Luther King, “I have always believed that the government was part of a conspiracy, either directly or indirectly, to assassinate him.”

So what is the connection between the ODBs, the Tupac Shakurs, and even the Soulja Slims of the world and MLK ? Every Black man with a microphone is a potential threat. Whether that threat is realized or not, they all had the potential to incite the youth to revolutionary action. After all, law enforcement has always paid an inordinate amount of attention to rappers. Recently, it was even reported that the DC police and the ATF set up a fake Hip-Hop record label in Washington D.C. [to try and catch rappers in illicit activities].

What if Russell Jones had lived long enough to become more political? What if his ideologies were expanding in the same manner as Dr. King’s? Remember the purpose of J. Edgar Hoover’s COINTELPRO was to “prevent the long range growth of militant Black organizations especially among youth.”

Maybe the truth lies in ODB’s haunting words when he bum-rushed the stage at the 1998 Grammy Awards:

“Wu-Tang is for the children. We teach the children!”

And this is America’s greatest fear.

Article courtesy of “This Ain’t Hip Hop;” a column for intelligent Hip Hop headz. TRUTH Minista Paul Scott represents the Militant Mind Militia. He can be reached at [email protected] , http://www.militantmindmilitia.com , or on Twitter (@truthminista).

Nick Cannon Makes First Post-Hospital Stay Appearance at BET Honors

(AllHipHop News) This year’s BET Honors did more than honor Mariah Carey.

It also marked the first public appearance of the singer’s husband, Nick Cannon, who was recently released from the hospital after suffering acute kidney failure during a winter break.

Cannon was on hand for the show’s taping on this past Saturday (January 14) to present Carey with the Entertainer of the Year Award.

Carey was among a string of celebrities recognized at the BET Honors, including Stevie Wonder, poet/author Dr. Maya Angelou, and film director Spike Lee.

Actress Gabrielle Union hosted the show, which took place in Washington D.C. and featured performances from rapper/actor Common, Patti LaBelle, Willow Smith, and Aretha Franklin.

Prior to presenting Carey with her award, People.com reports that Cannon praised his wife for her support and presence during his stay at a Los Angeles hospital after first being admitted to a medical facility in Aspen earlier this month.

The “America’s Got Talent” host is currently recovering at home after being discharged from the hospital last week following surgery.

“When times are hard, you guys don’t see her at 3 o’clock in the morning, getting up in the middle of the night, fixing me soup when my kidneys ain’t acting right. Mariah Carey does that, Cannon said onstage. “It is truly, truly a blessing to be here tonight, and I am humbled and in awe of everyone’s presence, but mostly my hero right there. What most people don’t get the opportunity to experience is the true woman; the virtuous person who is my angel.”

The 2012 BET Honors will air at 9 p.m. on Feb. 13 on BET.

Stars Attend BET Honors After Party In Washington, DC

A variety of stores gathered Saturday evening (January 15) in Washington DC, to celebrate the BET Honors.

Hennessey hosted the “Hennessey Vs BET Honors After Party” at The Park on Fourteenth and at The National Portrait Gallery.

Celebrities like Common, Aretha Franklin, Raekwon, Jill Scott, Anthony Hamilton, India Aire and DJ D-Nice, all came out to celebrate the event, as well as MLK weekend.

Check out some photos below:

Birdman Announces New Album With Lil Wayne, “Like Father Like Son 2: Tha Last Mob”

(AllHipHop News) The sequel to 2006’s Gold-certified album Like Father, Like Son is on the way according to Cash Money founder Brian “Baby” Williams.

The announcement came yesterday (January 14) when Birdman tweeted “LikeFather LikeSon 2 Tha Last MOB.YMCMB.”

This is one of the first updates on the Like Father, Like Son 2: Tha Last Mob since 2010 when Baby, in an interview with Entertainment Weekly, set a tentative release date of Father’s Day 2011 for the album.

“We’re planning on putting that out Father’s Day weekend,” he said. “[We’re] bringing that Cash Money/Young Money sound, that traditional hard-body rap, the music that we do together—that gangsta s**t, straight up.”

Other than the recent tweet, the latest update on the album came from Birdman when he said: “We have a lot of songs we did before [Wayne] went [to jail], and we’ve been working since he came home. All we’ve got to do is pick. And Wayne likes to be fresh with our music, so we might wait… and just knock out 20 songs right quick and put those on the album.”