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Diddy and Cassie have the most non-secret, “secret relationship” ever. The two have been creeping for a very long time, and it looks like they may finally be ready to share their love affair with the world. Check out what Diddy tweeted below:
Could this be another case of Diddy sub-tweeting and leaving it up to the reader to figure out who he’s talking about? Well, Diddy did not want you to guess wrong, so he followed up his tweet with a re-tweet of Cassie, who posted a photo of the two, along with the caption, “whisked off my feet…Cannes 2012.” Check out the re-tweet and photo below:
Diddy needs to stop playing and make Cassie his “official girl” already!
(AllHipHop News) Organizers for the annual Rock The Bells music festival have announced the final lineup for the New York show, which will take place this September.
This year’s Rock The Bells festival is a two-day event, that will take place on September 1 and 2.
Confirmed acts include Nas, Jadakiss, Common, Ice Cube, Pusha T, 2 Chainz, J. Cole, DMX and Eve, Ghostface, Raekwon, Sheek Louch, Styles P and a reunion between Bone Thugs-N-Harmony.
New York radio station Hot 97 is the sponsor of Rock The Bells, which will take place at the PNC Bank Arts Center in Holmdel, New Jersey.
“We are thrilled to partner with Hot 97 every year. They are the iconic sound and authoritative voice for Hip-Hop in New York. They encompass all that Rock The Bells is about, and that’s providing a world-class platform for this culture,” said Chang Weisberg, Guerilla Union Founder. “I’m looking forward to making history together again this year. We are honored that the station has committed to supporting Rock The Bells as their official end of summer extravaganza.”
General Admission tickets to Rock The Bells are $125, $195, and $250.
VIP tickets are available for $325, $395, and $450.
For more information visit: RockTheBells.net.
Happy Monday, my centers of influence!
Welcome to the beginning of the best week of your life! Today’s Daily Word is dedicated to making time! I once heard that the two most important days in your life are the day you are born, and the day you find out why! Your born day is a given, but the day you find out why is what most people spend most of their lives searching for! If most people would just quiet their minds for a moment, they would realize that their purpose is right in their face. Instead, they waste time on things that don’t matter while they neglect the things that do! They make excuses about how they don’t have enough time, but still proceed to waste it on meaningless things!
Always remember that time is the most sacred of all commodities! Once you waste it, you will never get it back! Instead of complaining of its lack, use what you do have wisely to do what you were put here to do! Those who want to do something bad enough find the time, those who
don’t find excuses!! Realize that there will always be a bidding war for your time, and that it is impossible to please everyone! Prioritize what has to be done and fully maximize your purpose! You only have one life to live…. Don’t waste it living someone else’s life!!
-Ash’Cash
“We don’t have an eternity to realize our dreams, only the time we are here.” -Susan Taylor
“There is never time in the future in which we will work out our salvation. The challenge is in the moment; the time is always now.” -James Arthur Baldwin
“Until you value yourself, you will not value your time. Until you value your time, you will not do anything with it.” -M. Scott Peck
“In truth, people can generally make time for what they choose to do; it is not really the time but the will that is lacking.” -John Lubbock
“Time is the most valuable coin in your life. You and you alone will determine how that coin will be spent. Be careful that you don’t let other people spend it for you.” -John Dryden
“If you want to make good use of your time, you’ve got to know what’s most important and then give it all you’ve got.” -Lee Iacocca
“Time is really the only capital that any human being has, and the only thing he can’t afford to lose.” -Thomas Edison
“Take time to deliberate; but when the time for action arrives, stop thinking and go in.” -Andrew Jackson
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.
(AllHipHop News) A New York lawyer claims the expensive watch Drake wears on the cover of his album Take Care, is actually his.
Noted music industry attorney James McMillan filed a lawsuit against Rafaello & Co over the watch in 2009.
According to the lawsuit, the brand-new, Rose Gold Rolex Presidential costs over $30,000.
McMillan claims he dropped the pricey watch off for cleaning, and when he went to pick it up, an employee told him that this Rolex was sold to Drake.
Drake has denied the claims and said that he actually received the watch on the cover of Take Care directly from Rolex.
Drake told the New York Post that he has “never heard of this jeweler.”
From the moment in the movie Breakin’ that Chris “The Glove” Taylor spun the “Reckless” beat”, Ice T has been a mainstay in the world of Hip-Hop. Although his early sound was electric and geared towards breakdancing, Ice T broke new ground with his song “6 In The Morning” and became the founder of the West Coast gangster rap style that would dominate the rap scene from the late ’80s on to the ’90s. Not content to just launch a genre’ within rap, Ice T was also one of the few artists to have a title soundtrack for a major motion film (Colors) and is also one of the first rap artists to launch a serious film acting career.
To say that Ice T has reached iconic status is a serious understatement as we can go on and on about his career accolades, but there is a new accolade that now stands out and that is his newfound status as a film director. Ice T has produced one of the finest and most detailed film documentaries about Hip-Hop in existence, as the legendary rapper explores the skills behind some of the greatest rap stars that the world as ever known. Calling on the likes of KRS-One, Rakim, Chuck D, Ice Cube, Eminem, and dozens more, Ice T’s film Something from Nothing: The Art of Rap takes the fans past the world of money, cars, women, and weed, to a place where the lyricists dwell. The film itself is a must see and serves as a source of inspiration and education for all Hip-Hop fans young and old.
AllHipHop.com sat down with the legendary Ice T to discuss his film, The Art of Rap, which will be released in theaters this Friday, June 15:
AllHipHop.com: When did you get the idea to do this film?
Ice T: I’ve been wanting to direct a movie. I’ve always wanted to get into directing, and everybody around me has known it. I really didn’t know what the topic of my first film was going to be. I was looking for that first vehicle, because you only have one chance to make a first impression. I sat back and took a look at the state of Hip-Hop. I’m watching it go Pop and get a little diluted. I thought to myself, “Everybody is running around rapping, and people don’t really don’t know where it comes from.” I didn’t feel that people were holding it in high regard and were even making a mockery of Hip-Hop.
I decided that I wanted to do a film about Hip-Hop and document it as an art form. I called everybody in my phone book and told them that I’m doing a film, and that I wanted to ask them questions. I wasn’t going to ask them about money, cars, jewelry, and beef. I’m going to ask about the craft and what you were thinking about when you wrote the rhymes. I was often told by these artists that nobody asks these kind of questions. And the reason for that is because we are in a gossip-based culture that is more concerned about who people are f*cking. I saw an article about someone buying another person a car, and I’m like, “This is bullsh*t. This is not news.”
I decided to make a movie and deal with the craft of Hip-Hop. I shot the movie in two years, and I took it to the Sundance Film Festival. It was purchased the first day of its showing, and now I have a theatrical release.
AllHipHop.com: I love that it took a West Coast cat to put something like this together. At what point in your career did you feel that you really had the respect of New York?
Ice T: I got New York’s respect right out of the gate. I think that I had their respect before I had L.A.’s respect.
AllHipHop.com: Really?
Ice T: Yeah. I was rhyming in L.A., and I was kind of bubbling, but Afrika Islam was the one that put me in the game. I got connected with him, and I went to New York and from there I met Grandmaster Caz, Melle Mel, and Afrika Bambaataa. They helped to get me my first record deal and put me in the game. L.A. knew I was rapper, but I wasn’t really respected there until I got my record deal. I think the only reason why a West Coast cat was able to make this movie is because I’m far enough on the road in the film industry. I started at the recording level, then worked to the TV and film level. Will Smith, Ice Cube, Latifah, and myself are at the film levels. There aren’t many rappers that would know how to go about making a movie.
AllHipHop.com: Watching the film, I was blown away by Grandmaster Caz. He’s a founding Hip-Hop pioneer, and he can still flow! A lot of people think that the older artists have lost their skills.
Ice T: I’m going to tell you like this, just because certain people are out of the spotlight doesn’t mean that they can’t do it anymore. That’s like saying that Miles Davis couldn’t play the trumpet at the end of his career. That’s stupid. The youth will always be in the crosshairs of what radio plays, but you don’t want to try to rap against Melle Mel. It’s like Melle said, “Your mistake is thinking that I’m dead and gone, but ask your mama, I’m bloody in the Octagon.”
A lot of rappers today have a cakewalk. They make a record and all of the sudden they are official MCs. When we came out, you had to battle your way to the top. A lot of them haven’t had that trial by fire yet.
AllHipHop.com: Eminem had a big highlight in the film with his freestyle. Tell us about that.
Ice T: One of the questions that I asked him and other MCs in the film was, “Can you bust a rhyme for us that nobody has ever heard?” Anytime Eminem rhymes, you just sit there and go, “OK.” He’ll spit something like, “I’m pulling my boxers up with boxing gloves, and three Oxycontin stuck to my esophagus.” You just ask yourself in amazement, “Who the f*ck writes this sh*t?”
To me, all of my friends and peers in Hip-Hop are experts, whether it’s Redman, Immortal Technique, or Chino XL. They are beasts! Whether they are on the radio or not, they are still forces to be reckoned with.
AllHipHop.com: Was there one artist that you really regret not being a part of this film?
Ice T: There’s hundreds of artists that I would have loved to have on the film. There’s Busta Rhymes, Ludacris, and Lil Wayne, just to name a few. I made the calls, but different people were doing different things. I had to get myself from New York where I’m shooting “Law & Order”, a camera crew from London, and the artists together in the same room at the same time. Just imagine how it was with someone like Snoop Dogg. I might tell him to meet at 3PM, and he would agree, only to show up to find out that he had to leave in order to handle his football league for the kids. Then he might come back later and say, “Sorry O.G. Let’s try this tomorrow.”
Then I’ve got my camera crew, and I’ve got B-Real on the line, and I’m like, “Tell that motherf*cker not to move. I’m on my way.” [Laughter] You have to go run and get them. When you are doing a documentary, everybody involved is doing you a favor.
Nobody was overlooked. The phone calls did go out. I went straight to my phone book, and we got as many as we could. When we finished, there were 52 rappers filmed and 35 more waiting to be filmed. I’ve got two hours on each artist, and we have to edit the film down to 120 minutes. That’s when the work kicked in.
AllHipHop.com: After you saw the film, was there anything that you wished that you could do again or do different?
Ice T: That’s a good question. Is there anything that I wish I could have done again or different? I’d have to say not really. It’s perfect to me. The only thing is that I could have cut the same two-hour movie with absolutely different clips, and it would be just as good. It would a mirror image of the movie with different pieces of KRS-One, Big Daddy Kane, and Rakim. I could probably make 10 movies from different clips that can sit side-by-side with each other.
AllHipHop.com: Are you going to use any of the extra material?
Ice T: Yes, it will eventually see the day of light, but right now, I just want to focus on the film and getting people out on June 15 to go see it. This isn’t just for me. I want the world to see that Hip-Hop is a force to be reckoned with and urban films. Very rarely will a Black documentary get a theatrical release, and you are never going to see so many Black people in a film that are just talking. You’re not going to see n*ggas talking the way we talk, unedited, just straight in to the camera.
AllHipHop.com: Can you list your “Top 5 Rappers Dead or Alive?”
Ice T: Here are my Top 5 rappers, in no particular order. There’s Rakim, of course, who is strictly about the flow, taking me in to a whole different dimension. Chuck D made us all put our fists in the air and said that we have to fight the power. Ice Cube, just because he’s f*cking Ice Cube. That n*gga’s a beast. When he said, “Straight Outta Compton,” to me that’s the hardest record in the history of Hip-Hop. Then there’s KRS-One. If you have never seen KRS perform live in concert, there is nothing more Hip-Hop than him. Then, I’ll toss it up between Jay-Z and Nas as one person.
AllHipHop.com: So we’ve got a tie between Jay-Z and Nas.
Ice T: Yes, because I think that Nas is one of the more intricate lyricists out there, and then there’s Jay-Z who can make records. You can go to a club and dance to Jay-Z songs for two hours. I can go on forever, and there are many other worthy artists like Kool G Rap. Of course, also there’s Biggie and Pac who are cliche’ answers. There’s artists like Scarface – c’mon son. Ludacris is a beast. Lupe Fiasco, you know.
AllHipHop.com: Tell us your favorite personal Hip-Hop memory.
Ice T: Wow! AllHipHop.com wants to know my favorite personal memory. Honestly, it’s a selfish memory. I think of the time that I first hit the stage of Dope Jam Tour in Austin, Texas. This was the big tour with myself, Doug E. Fresh, Biz Markie, KRS-One, Eric B. & Rakim, and Kool Moe Dee. I’m an L.A. rapper, and this is my first arena tour, and we were the opening act.
We hit that f*ckin’ stage with “Colors” and that place lit the f*ck up! I was like, “G*d damn, I’m big! I’m a motherf*ckin’ star!” We’re in Texas and I had records out. “Colors” was the hit, and that place lit the hell up when we came out throwing money and standing on police cars. We actually captured that in one of my videos. They probably looked at me thinking that I did that everyday. I was looking at the audience and smiling like, “G*d d#####! I made it.” It was exciting, and that was the moment where I knew that this sh*t really was going to work. That one city was the beginning of a big tour and that was a moment.
AllHipHop.com: Ice T, thank you for taking the time for this interview. I’ve been following you since “Reckless”, and this is an honor.
Ice T: You’re welcome. Make sure that if people want to see the movie trailer, they can go to www.artofrap.com (or view it below). They can see the cast and the music in the movie. Also, follow me on Twitter at www.twitter.com/FINALLEVEL.
AllHipHop.com: I always see you on Twitter talking to your fans and battling your haters.
Ice T: Hate is a bi-product of the game. They get so frustrated. They just need to remove the mirrors from their house, and they’ll be OK.
Something From Nothing: The Art of Rap is in theaters this Friday, June 15. Watch the trailer below:
“…Like conscious rappers/Mad ‘cause we winnin’” – “Lap Dance”, Tyga
During a recent episode of BMET’s (Black Mis-Education Television), Fantastic Friday Rap Battle, the crowd went wild as the champ, B. Grimey, dropped bombastic bombs on the challenger, MC Imhotep. By the time he said his third “yo mama so Black” rhyme, the celebrity judges were applauding loudly as hosts, Clarence J and Rosie danced across the stage. However, when MC Imhotep started rappin’ about how Grimey’s sneakers were made from sweatshop slave labor, his bling courtesy of South African diamond mines, and his swag a product of a dysfunctional educational system, the audience sat dumbfounded, and the judges ran for cover as Clarence J yelled “cut to commercial….”
Hip-Hop has a long history of beef with intelligent rappers. I remember back in the day when Kangol Kid of UTFO dissed fellow group member EMD, “The Educated Rapper” in front of Roxanne, with the classic line “I know you’re educated/But when will you learn/Not all girls want to be involved with book worms.” Since EMD was just a character who wasn’t exactly known for droppin’ knowledge, it was understood as just part of the act.
However, when rappers like Tyga infer that intelligent MCs are just hatin’ on him and his crew because they are “winning,” that, sir, means war!
In fairness, Tyga was not the first to diss Hip-Hop brainiacs, as over years more than a few commercially successful rappers have taken random shots at intellectual rappers. Remember back in 2002, Nelly aimed a diss at “tha Teacha,” KRS-ONE, when he said that people judging Hip-Hop are the ones whose album flop on his song “Number 1.”
Ouch.
So, does Hip-Hop really despise smart rappers?
Historically, America has always feared intelligent Black men. Even going back to the early 19th Century with Nat Turner. Although he is portrayed in history books as a mindless brute, runnin’ around slaughtering slave owners, Turner was intelligent. Also, even though the Black Panthers of the late 1960s were known for bustin’ their guns, it must remembered that the party was founded on a college campus, and their main threat to the power structure was their political education classes. Today, since Hip-Hop is dominated by Black male voices, the paranoia is still there.
Although Ice T is mostly known for his pimp and gun talk, his most threatening lyric was “my lethal weapon is my mind.” That still holds true today as, although White mainstream Americans profess to hate violent, misogynist rap music, the reason why they back it financially and give it a platform is because of their fear of the alternative; music that will inspire Black people to challenge the status quo.
So, it is not really hate that fuels the animosity against intelligence in rap, but fear. And when this fear is internalized, it morphs into self-hatred. As Marianne Williamson said in her oft quoted poem, “Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate, but that we are powerful beyond measure.”
Although some rappers are actually intellectually challenged in real life, many are just playing dumb. One of the best examples is one of the hottest rappers in the game right now, 2Chainz. Although, he is rumored to be academically gifted and, according to his website, even down with the Hip-Hop Congress’s “Respect My Vote” campaign, the message that he sends our children does not reflect any of that. His latest songs, “Riot” and “Rich Man’s World” could have easily been the political anthems of the Occupy Wall Street/Trayvon Martin Era, but instead he chose to continue with the same misogynistic tales of murder and mayhem.
So what do we do?
We declare war.
Contrary to popular belief, there has never been an all out war against Hip-Hop ignorance.
Although, back in ‘94, Jeru the Damaja threatened to stab “Mr. Ignorance,” “in the heart with sharp steel bookmarks” in “Can’t Stop The Prophet”, he is alive and kicking. Reason being, over the years we have either looked to a rap apologist going through mid-life crisis still tryin’ to be down, or an overpaid Hip-Hop academician to solve the problem.
However, the solutions are simple.
First, we have to stop parroting the lie that the reason that Hip-Hop is in its present state because that is what “we” want.
Uh…no, “we” don’t.
Unfortunately, anyone who is smarter than a fifth grader is, somehow, always left out of the official Hip-Hop census.
Also, conscious rappers and Hip-Hop journalists need to stop goin’ out like suckas. Although, playing dumb may be an entrance requirement for the cool kids table for high school freshman, when adults dumb themselves down to fit in with their kid’s homies…Well, that’s just wrong.
Finally, as unbelievable as it might sound, the best sage wisdom comes courtesy of the late Notorious B.I.G. on his song “Unbelievable”. “Dumb rappers need teachin’.” If we can’t make being smart cool, at least we can make being stupid, uncool.
So, no Tyga we ain’t mad because you’re winnin’. We’re mad because of lyrics like yours, our children are losin’.
Although, school is out for the summer, we have to admit that for Hip-Hop, school has been out for decades. It’s time ring the bell and yell, “Class is back in session!”
A generation ago, KRS One proclaimed, “The age of the ignorant rapper is done.” Unfortunately, we’ve been singin’ that same song for 20 summers.
Maybe this year, KRS. Maybe this year….
TRUTH Minista Paul Scott’s weekly column is This Ain’t Hip Hop, a column for intelligent Hip-Hop headz.
Reach him via e-mail at **@************ts.com“>in**@*****************ed.com, on his website, www.nowarningshotsfired.com, or on Twitter (@truthminista).
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