In a recent interview, Mannie Fresh revealed that he was once courted by Def Jam when Jay-Z was president. He had a deal on the table and a song with Lil Wayne. Well, he says that the deal ultimately didn’t go through because somebody over at Cash Money shot it down, refusing to clear the Weezy verse. The crazy part of it is that Wayne agreed to do the song…but the real bosses didn’t. At the end of the day, the deal fell through based upon that lil mess. Mannie gave Cash Money their musical foundation, but I guess that wasn’t enough. He was even in a group with Baby. Oh well…Jay-Z left Def Jam and…. Here is the video.
(AllHipHop News) On December 2, the Producer’s Guild of America (PGA) announced their 2012 nominees for Best Documentary.
The critically acclaimed, Michael Rapaport directed, Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels of A Tribe Called Quest is one of five documentaries nominated for this year’s awards.
In years past, the PGA has been known to be a great barometer for which films will get nominated and ultimately win at the Oscars which will take place in February of 2012.
However, unfortunately, the Academy did not include Beats, Rhymes & Life in their 15-film shortlist of documentaries nominated for the upcoming Oscars.
There has been some backlash from the Hip-Hop community for the Academy’s snub of the film, yet the PGA nomination is a great achievement for both the filmmaker, the producers, and the members of A Tribe Called Quest.
Along with Beats, Rhymes & Life, other nominated documentaries include: Bill Cunningham New York, Project Nim, Senna, and, The Union.
All other nominations for the 2012 PGAs will be announced on January 3, with the winners being announced and awarded on January 21.
In October, AllHipHop.com got the opportunity to speak to the documentary’s director, Michael Rapaport, at a special screening during the 2011 CMJ Music & Film Festival.
James Brown said it best: “This is a man’s world.”
A pitbull in a skirt, a bombshell in the boardroom, a scantily-clad video vixen – women have played lots of roles in rap over the years. There are both good and bad images of girl power in Hip-Hop, but if longtime industry vet Shanti Das has anything to do with it, young women who aspire to jump into this crazy, changeable world will be equipped to keep their pockets and their reps in check.
Even in 2011, women find themselves trying to break through that invisible glass ceiling that says they can only go but so far. In the music industry, and Hip-Hop in particular, women are few and far among the top leaders as artists and industry leaders.
Das, with her new book and priceless years of wisdom gained from boosting the careers of legends like TLC, Outkast, and Goodie Mob, is set to help others bust through that same ceiling – the same one that didn’t hold her back. AllHipHop.com checked in with Das to learn more about her “ladies first” motivational message and the “Queen” who helped inspire her:
AllHipHop.com: Hi, how are you, Shanti?
Shanti: Good! How are you?
AllHipHop.com: The first thing, Shanti, as I look through the book, it is clear that you’ve been a mover and a shaker in the industry for some time, but for our audience that isn’t familiar with you, can you tell them why your name is so well known in the music industry?
Shanti: Sure. I am a 20-year music industry veteran. I got my start back in 1991 with Capitol Records while I was still in college at Syracuse University. I had the good fortune of working with a lot of really great artists over the years that I mention in the book, i.e. Outkast, Goodie Mob, Busta Rhymes, Akon, Run DMC, and well into the R&B arena, such as TLC, Toni Braxton, Erykah Badu, Prince, and so on.
AllHipHop.com: Okay, so a lot of those people you named have, you know, like 20+ year careers. Would you say that has anything to do with their affiliation with you over the years?
Shanti: I would like to think so. I’m not really one for tooting my own horn. But I have been told, you know, by the artists themselves and many others in the industry, that I’ve definitely made a contribution to, I think, the longevity of a lot of these artists in the industry today.
AllHipHop.com: Okay, cool, so the book is geared towards women. It’s called The Hip-Hop Professional: A Woman’s Guide to Climbing the Ladder of Success in the Entertainment Business. So, why was it important for you to gear this specifically for women?
Shanti: It was important for me to gear the book to Hip-Hop professionals, towards women, because I feel like women sometimes don’t support each other enough – although I’ve seen a lot more of it over the last few years with organizations such as W.E.E.N., the Boss Network, N.A.B.F.E.M.E., and Diva Lounge. I am very happy that a lot of women are supporting one another, but when I was coming up there weren’t a lot of female organizations out there to help mentor other young women on the come up. I also saw a lot of women, and I even had experiences, you know where women were hating on one another and just really not try to help each other move forward and succeed in the business.
AllHipHop.com: Okay, well, as I was looking through it, it seems geared towards younger women, like maybe college age, women who are starting their careers. So was that your goal to target it towards, sort of, that up and coming young woman?
Shanti: It was. As you mentioned, my primary demographic is college students. I do a lot of speaking and lectures at colleges. I feel like it is so tough to get into the music industry as it now, because there are so fewer labels, but I find that there are still so many young women that want to work in the music business and in the entertainment industry. So, I felt like it’s my guide to hopefully offer a lot of insight into what goes on in the music business, and how to get your foot in the door.
AllHipHop.com: Right, okay. Well, you call it a guide but to me, it read more like a personal story, or like an autobiography of your time.
Shanti: Well, yeah, like my memoir.
AllHipHop.com: Right, like a memoir, exactly. So, can you tell me, like what were some of the best of times and some of the worst of times for you as a woman in the Hip-Hop industry?
Shanti: I think some of the best of times, well one, being able to see your get work manifested to greatness. I spent a lot of hours working on the Outkast project and the Goodie Mob project. With Outkast being rappers from the South, you know, back in the day it was all about East Coast and West Coast. Whether it was Biggie or Pac or even with all the groups like Naughty by Nature and Ice Cube, and all those guys breaking on those coasts. But you know, as we used to call it, the South Coast if you will, you know, it wasn’t as easy for us breaking into the mainstream arena.
So, I think one of the great highlights in my career was back in 1995 when Outkast won “Best New Artist” at the Source Awards. It was really like, wow, we are finally breaking barriers and, you know, accomplishing something here. I know how hard the group worked, as well as I did and the label, to really put those guys out there and put them on the map. So, that was, you know, a really good time for me.
Some of the worst times were me being hated on by other women, you know, that I know of in the business. I won’t mention any names, because it’s not worth it. But, just knowing that women, for no real apparent reason, just didn’t want to see me go any farther. And don’t get me wrong, I do have some that I am friends with to this day that were huge champions of my efforts and everything that I did in the business, and I absolutely appreciate them.
There were a lot of women that just kept up with the cattiness and just didn’t see that there was power in numbers if we had just kind of worked together. We could have done a lot more together as opposed to just knocking each other down.
AllHipHop.com: I definitely know about that. I know personally for myself being an executive at a Hip-Hop website that women in this industry are often accused of doing special favor‚ getting here, and I haven’t, and I’m proud of that.
Shanti: Good for you.
AllHipHop.com: Thank you. So, what is your most sound piece of advice for, say a college-aged woman who wants to do this, but she is already getting sort of pulled in that direction?
Shanti: I think my best advice I can give to women, is that you have to go out there and demand their respect. And you’re going to be tempted, but temptation is huge in this industry, because it’s a very social industry. So in addition to being in the office, you’re going to find yourself at launches and dinner parties, showcases, having to travel on the road with the artist, and you’re going to feel like you are being compromised at times and objectified. You have to demand the respect and let them know that you’re not there for that.
I’ve had situations where I’ve been hit on, and I’ve had to handle the situation accordingly. And I think the best thing I can tell women is, you have to handle those situations right when they happen, because if you blow it off and laugh them off, and you become a tease to them, they are going to continue doing it. They are going to think, ‘You know what, I haven’t cracked her, but eventually I know I can.’
If you let them know like, ‘Look, I’m cool with you, I love this game, and this is what I want to do, but if I got to get to it this way, then it’s not really going to work for me. You have to get out there and work hard and show them that you’re not there for that. I’ve known women that have gone on to marry guys that they’ve met in the industry, but you gotta do it on your time and always be in control, because if you let them be in control them it’s going to be bad for you.
AllHipHop.com: For sure. I’m thinking of a lot of these reality shows; they sort of send off a message and show women, you know, whether they be connected to a Hip-Hop artist or a basketball player or, you know, those sorts of guys, it’s not all pretty. So what do you think about the way that we are being personified in these shows and things now?
Shanti: Yeah, you know, I watch some of those shows just ‘cause I want to stay in the know and keep up with what’s going on out in our community. Although, I don’t agree with everything that is going on, I think that women have to find their own way in society, and I hope that the friends of the friends will kind of come to them and be honest and help them understand that sometimes there is a better way to do things.
I’m not here to judge anybody, because until you’ve walked in someone’s shoes, you don’t know what their circumstances are. But I do hope that we can see more positivity and see more independent women making a way for themselves, and not deal with a lot of the BS that they have to deal with.
AllHipHop.com: Right, okay. So, I know having the career that you’ve had so far that you’ve been influenced by some people over the years, so the question I want ask you is, who in your opinion is the most influential or powerful woman that has ever existed in Hip-Hop, on the business side or the music side?
Shanti: Well, I don’t know that I can say the most powerful, but in my eyes, the one that I think shows and exudes the most power is Queen Latifah. Again, that’s my opinion, because, you know, I remember, and I like to call her “La” from back in the day. I would see her at shows, and she was always the same nice person, kind. Lyrically, I loved what she was talking about. She was bringing creativity and positivity into the communities, and I’m not just saying it has to be all-positive, because life is about balances, right?
AllHipHop.com: Right.
Shanti: Queen Latifah was always somebody who started off positive, and she was able to really create that next generation of business for herself. Now, she is not only a singer and rapper, she is an incredibly savvy businesswoman. She has all of these endorsements, is a phenomenal actress, and she still is cool. Like at the end of the day, she is still is just as cool as she was like back in the early 90s when she was on the road with Naughty by Nature, doing shows all across the country.
But, she is someone that I look up to and always treated me the same. Because, in this business, all I ever want is respect. I don’t expect anyone to kiss my behind, excuse my language, but just treat me the same way. We are the same people that we were back in the day except some of us have had different experiences, we’ve made more money or vice versa, but at the end of the day, all you want is respect.
Sometimes, I see women that make a lot of money, they achieve this success, and they get brand new. I’m like, ‘Really? Like, okay. I remember back in the day when me and you were on the same level in terms of life experiences and career experiences and, you know, we kicked it. Now, like you don’t have time and you don’t call’ [each other]. And granted, we are busy, and we have a lot going on, but just try to show people the same amount of respect. ‘Cause at the end of the day, what’s going to be your legacy? I’d rather be the chick that like, you know what, when people say, that girl is always the same every time I see her.
And you know, everybody has a lot going on in their lives, but at the end of the day, who am I to treat you any differently? Because I could be in that same boat, and I’m in the position now that I started my career over. I pressed my reset button and walked away from a huge salary and corner office to do things a little bit differently and focus on other things that were important in my life. I was still trying to do music but, you know, I’m not at the award shows all the time or taking all these trips everywhere. I don’t see a lot of these men and women on a regular basis. You learn like, who are your friends or whatever, but at the end of the day, all you want is your respect.
AllHipHop.com: Right, that’s great. I really agree with that. So, just a few more questions. I picked some influential women on my own, just to get a quick opinion from you on them…
Shanti: Sure …
AllHipHop.com: …on what they signify. The first is Sylvia Robinson of Sugar Hill Records. We just lost her less than a month ago, so what are your thoughts on Sylvia?
Shanti: Well, one, I regret that I never knew her personally. But, I absolutely know about her legacy, and I think that Sylvia was obviously one of the first women that paved for women working at record companies and having their own record companies. So, if there wasn’t a Sylvia, a Sylvia Robinson, there wouldn’t have been a Sylvia Rhone.
AllHipHop.com: Right, how about that? How about that?
Shanti: Yep!
AllHipHop.com: Okay, TLC, who I see you in pictures with throughout the book. The two remaining members are still doing great stuff, and Rest In Peace to LeftEye, who we still feel is right here with us after all these years.
Shanti: Absolutely.
AllHipHop.com: So, TLC, what are your thoughts?
Shanti: TLC, I love dearly. Not only did I work with them closely as artists, they are really good friends of mine. I talk to them on a regular basis. I think they do great things in the community, and anytime I need Chilli to do something charity wise, she is always there. If she can’t come, she’s making a donation. She is a great mother and a great role model for people in the community. T-Boz, another that’s just my heart, and I love her to death. She has struggled so much over the years with Sickle Cell but is a trooper and a fighter and will still go out there and do shows. She is another great mother and great role model in the community. I just think they are wonderful girls, and they never let the success go to their heads. They are the same people they were back when I first met them as well.
I guess you can see that in a lot of my answers that I’m big on “just be who you are.” We experience so many different things in life, and some people are affected differently by them but, at the end of the day, we should still remain the same people in terms of our morals and values that were instilled in us early on. And if we didn’t have that coming up, then it’s up to other women to kind of put that out there into the universe, so that we can spread that positivity to the other ladies.
AllHipHop.com: Absolutely that we need more of that amongst women for sure, we are our own worst enemy a lot of the time.
Shanti: Correct.
AllHipHop.com: The third person I wanted to ask you about is sort of the lady of the day right now, which is Nicki Minaj.
Shanti: Yeah…
AllHipHop.com: … who we saw at the American Music Awards. Nicki is loved and she is hated for different reasons. So, what are your thoughts on Nicki Minaj?
Shanti: I don’t have any bad thing to say about Nicki. I think Nicki obviously has done a great job in terms of taking her career to new heights. She is kind of out there by herself as a female MC, and when I say out there by herself, sure there are other female MCs that are out there trying to make it on the come up, but she has been the one to kind of break down that barrier. She is the, uh, I hate to make that comparison, but I’ll just say, she is the premiere female MC of our time and of this decade, if you will.
I would like to learn more about what she is doing out there in the community. I’m sure she is doing great things, but I would just like to see more of that side of her to kind of balance out everything else. I will say, I applaud her in terms of her being able to expand her brand because kids, you know, were dressing up like Nicki Minaj for Halloween. They were selling those costumes in certain venues. I think a lot of artists, when they get to that uber success, they don’t know how to capitalize from a business perspective, and they let these other companies make money off of their brand, name, and likeness.
But it seems like Nicki is doing a good job of making herself a brand‚ as opposed to just Nicki the rapper. You know, it’s the Nicki Minaj brand, as opposed to her being seen as just a rapper.
AllHipHop.com: Right, right, yeah, she has been really good at doing that. So, the last thing I want to wrap up with is, I get e-mail alerts and things from you about the things that you’ve done in the community recently, and we had Thanksgiving come up last week and everything. So, what’s next for you on the professional/do-gooder side over the next months, Shanti?
Shanti: Okay, well I just recently on Sunday, I started this new thing where I feed the homeless once a month in Atlanta, Georgia, and it’s been recently branded “No Reservations Needed.” I thought that was cool ‘cause we just showed up one Sunday about four months ago. I passed by this same parking lot after church, and there’s a lot of homeless people out there, so I just started gathering all my friends, and we just had our fourth one; we served Thanksgiving dinner, and we served over 400 plates.
Philanthropy and mentoring is big for me. To be more specific, to answer your question, I volunteer for a lot of organizations, the Sisters of Today and Tomorrow, which is one that I do, where I mentor several girls but I’d like to take this on the road. I’m going to start speaking at a lot of colleges. I really feel that, not to get all spiritual on you or anything, but I think I finally realized my place. Like, it takes a lot for one to find this space and this comfort and this peace in life, but I know why God has me here now and that’s to help other people.
I think He inserted me in the industry because I can understand that world, and I just try to spread a little more love and support in that arena as well as everything else. So, in addition to doing the music, because I have my showcase, I do “ATL Live” in the park, which is once a month, but I really feel like doing more in the community, giving back and helping these young women and men. I’ve even had a lot of men tell me that they learned a lot from me in The Hip-Hop Professional. They now know how they should treat women, you know, so I think it’s not just a book for women.
I had four young men that bought the book this weekend and were so excited about it and couldn’t wait to read it. So, I just want to give back more. I want my legacy, when some one says, you know, when I pass away, to say, ‘Wow, Shanti really gave a damn about others.’
AllHipHop.com: Right, okay, well Shanti, I want to say I feel totally empowered now! I think as women in the industry we need to support each other more, more positivity, and share those things with each other. I feel like I can go do a whole bunch of work for the rest of the day now!
Shanti: If I can ever support you. and if AllHipHop ever does any more stuff in the community, call on me. You know I have a lot of respect for Chuck and all of you guys, and I would love to get to know you better. I will fly to New York, I will go to L.A., whatever y’all need, like, I’m here. I really, really, genuinely want to help.
AllHipHop.com: Alright, thank you. I definitely will get back to you about that, because Chuck [Creekmur] and I started an initiative last year called City for Change, where we’ve been going city to city and creating, like, a town hall meeting for teens, and we talk to them about Hip-Hop and some of the imagery, how to cut through to what’s real and what’s not. We’ve also been talking to them about careers in Hip-Hop. You know, the majority of us will never be a rapper, but you might be a sound technician, you might be a DJ, or a journalist like me…
Shanti: Exactly, I think my book speaks right to that, so you know, whatever I can do to help, that would be great. If you don’t mind, would you mention my website on where the book is available?
AllHipHop.com: Absolutely, you can give it to me now.
Shanti:Yes, it’s www.thehiphopprofessional.com. It’s also available as an eBook on the Kindle, and on Amazon and iTunes.
(AllHipHop News) Public Enemy hype man/reality star Flavor Flav is returning to TV on the celebrity edition of “Wife Swap.”
Flavor Flav will be among the stars who “swap” their wives during the celebrity edition of the show.
The legendary rap star will swap his wife with Twisted Sister’s Dee Snyder’s spouse.
Others featured on the celebrity edition of “Wife Swap” include Gary Busey, Pastor Ted Haggard, Mick Foley, Carnie Wilson and others.
Flavor Flav, born William Drayton, Jr., has been featured in a number of hit reality shows over the past decade.
He first hit the small screen in 2003 on “The Surreal Life,” where he developed a relationship with Bridgette Nelson.
That show was followed by 2005’s “Strange Love,” which centered around their burgeoning relationship.
Flavor Flav then starred in three seasons of “The Flavor of Love” which also spawned reality shows like “Charm School,” “I Love New York” and “I Love Money.”
Five episodes of “Wife Swap” are slated to air on ABC beginning in January 3 at 9:00 PM.
Welcome to the end of a great week! Today’s Daily Word is dedicated to Living Differently! Some of us have the audacity to try to live a life that is not ours! Some of us have the gall to complain about the hand that we were dealt, not knowing that our hand is what makes us special! Some of us really spend time wishing we were better fully disrespecting the person we are right now!! Live differently!!
Stop trying to fit it when you were born to stand out!! You are a unique being that can do anything you put your mind to! Believe in who you are whole-heatedly and understand that who you are is the core of your greatness!! Life is for living, so the sooner you become comfortable in your own skin, the sooner you begin to live! Absolutely, positively, nothing can stop you!! The World and Everything in it is YOURS!!! TAKE WHAT YOU DESERVE!!!!
-Ash’Cash
“Create a vision and never let the environment, other people’s beliefs, or the limits of what has been done in the past shape your decisions. Ignore conventional wisdom.” -Anthony Robbins
“Some of the most wonderful people are the ones who don’t fit into boxes.” -Tori Amos
“Don’t let anyone tell you that you have to be a certain way. Be unique. Be what you feel.” -Melissa Etheridge
“Always show the you in you that makes you the you that you are.” -Chidinma Obietikponah
“If being sane is thinking there’s something wrong with being different….I’d rather be completely mental.” -Angelina Jolie
“No matter what age you are, or what your circumstances might be, you are special, and you still have something unique to offer. Your life, because of who you are, has meaning.” -Barbara De Angelis
“In order to be irreplaceable one must always be different.” -Coco Chanel
“Believe in your dreams and they may come true; believe in yourself and they will come true.” -Unknown
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.
“I never seen no one around work as hard as Dwayne Carter.” – Birdman
Bryan “Birdman” Williams says he and his brother Slim are the experience behind the success that Young Money/Cash Money has reached in the past few years. Some of that experience came way before the siblings ever stepped foot in a studio or signed an artist to a deal.
Part 1 of AllHipHop.com’s exclusive with Birdman focused on the diverse and talented roster of artists signed to his label – and how he believes their work ethic will help them reach unseen heights. In Part 2, we learn about Birdman’s many entrepreneurial endeavors under the Cash Money brand, and what he passed along in terms of wisdom to one of the top-selling rappers around. He also notes the one thing that will finally make him stop working:
AllHipHop.com: I definitely think people have always respected you as a businessman. Some guys in your position in rap say they translated some of their street hustle over into the music industry. But even before the street hustle, how did you and Slim’s business minds develop? Were you an entrepreneur as a kid?
Birdman: Nah, I was born a hustler! My daddy was a hustler. I was born with the blood of a hustler. My daddy was a great hustler. He did great in his life; he just was never rich. We were still living in the ‘hood, but I had more than everything ‘cause of my daddy. I was born a hustler. I didn’t have to learn how to hustle. I just learned by being in situations, born in poverty and the streets, but I was born with the blood of a hustler.
So, for me, doing this sh*t is common, natural for me…how to take advantage of my situations and how to build something and how to be dominant at it. This is a numbers game, and I’m just great at it. I’m just great at it – I don’t even have a word for it. [laughter] I just give all my praise to God, and I think I was just born with this blood of a hustler.
AllHipHop.com: OK, well, you say you were born that way, but is that something that other people can be taught if they’re not born that way?
Birdman: Yeah, you can be taught how to hustle. You can be taught, but it all comes with want, you know? Sometimes people don’t want as much. I just have the mindset of wanting a lot. Some people don’t be wanting a lot of money. Some people just be cool with what they have. I never tended to be satisfied. If I reach one goal, I always set another goal. As far as the business, that’s just because through my struggles and my times, I kinda figured it out. I understand it, and I’m a student. I learned on my own, we learned by trial, error, mistakes, and just going through things. Everything we’ve been through, I want the young ones to avoid that now. I think my experiences have a lot to do with our success right now.
AllHipHop.com: We’ve watched Lil Wayne grow into this larger-than-life character and brand over the past decade. I, for one, thought he was good as a kid, but I couldn’t have predicted this. So, how much of that hustler influence have you passed on to Wayne?
Birdman: He’s a natural, too, but he learned a lot from me. He took everything I taught him, and he put it in his game. He’s a modern day of me, you know? When I was young, I did great, but my son’s gon’ do better. That’s just how it’s supposed to be, ‘cause I gave him everything I got, my blood, my body, my soul, every part of me. We gon’ live together or die together – that’s the relationship that me and Wayne have, and that’s just what it do.
I think what he saw and what he learned…he’s a very smart individual. He just took everything and put it for today’s time. I think Wayne’s gonna be one of the best to ever be involved in the business part, from a rapper perspective and a CEO. When he stops rapping, that’s when I’ma stop. There ain’t no need for me to do it no more, ‘cause he’s gonna take it and bring it somewhere we never could.
AllHipHop.com: I would definitely say you guys have figured out some ways to weather this change in the sales model, the change in the business side of the industry. How do you stay one step ahead?
Birdman: Not giving up, just staying trendy, really making the right decisions. You know, walking through fire, and when it gets hot, we don’t fold. We stick together. Sticking together and being loyal to each other was and still is the key. I always wanted a team, so we have a strong team, and everyday, I’m trying to make our staff and our team stronger. But, hard work? That’s start and stop right there. If you don’t have that, meaning a start button, you’re finished already. It all starts with the work ethics. I never seen no one around work as hard as Dwayne Carter.
AllHipHop.com: And I would also say it has something to do with having your finger on what’s the next thing, the next hot thing, being a trendsetter. So where does that side come from?
Birdman: Knowing talent and really letting the talent be who they are. You know, when you’re signed to a major, they always got something to say, like they know sh*t and they really don’t know a f*cking thing about what’s going on outchea. So for me, just letting Drake do what he wanna do, be his own boss, you hear me, and we just do our part. Nicki…you know, they’re their own bosses, and you know, we just work together as a team. It all starts with a team.
No one does it by themselves, trust me. It all is about the team, the teamwork. The million, the two million – that was team. For Drake to do what he’s done, that’s team. It’s been accomplished, it’s been done with a team. It starts with the family, but the team’s gotta make it proper like it’s supposed to. So, letting the artist be an artist, more than anything.
AllHipHop.com: I would say, too, you guys are good at the risk-taking, becauseI mean, they’re not afraid to wear whatever they want to wear. They’re not afraid to rap, and then sing a whole album…
Birdman: It’s just 2012. These youngsters run the world. It’s about the youngsters to me.
AllHipHop.com: Yeah, I feel you…
Birdman: It’s a different fashion. It’s a different everything. It ain’t what it used to be at all. It ain’t the same people it used to be at all, so it’s a different, like, you got children. It’s a different world. They’re young, and they’re doing different sh*t. That’s what it all comes from, and that’s great for the game to me. To stay the same? It’s stale to get old. You got to trend it. If you don’t do it, it’s gonna do it for you, so it’s your choice. Either you get with it or get off it.
AllHipHop.com: Would you say the past few years have possibly been some of the best for Cash Money? What do you want your long-term legacy to be in Hip-Hop?
Birdman: Everything has been great for us. The past two years has been wonderful, and it’s been a helluva experience. But my future is what my plans are. Everything we’ve been through is setting us up for this year, and next year, I won’t stop, we won’t stop until we’re the first billionaire brand in business in this thing. And I don’t think anyone has ever did that…ever in the business. So I think that would be a big accomplishment for us, and we’re gonna die trying.
I’ma give everything I got in my soul, my body, everything in my mind, everything that I own, everything connected to us is what we’re striving for. And we know we’re gonna have to sell a lot of records to do that. And we gon’ keep grinding hard and keep growing, and I promise you, we ain’t gon’ stop [laughter]… we’re gonna keep grinding, keep growing. It’s just expanding our brand into other businesses outside of the music business, just being a part of everything with everybody. Not just us, just with everybody that’s part of the brand, just doing as much as possible. It all pertains to music, movies, and to just keep going.
AllHipHop.com: OK, well, beyond Busta and Mystikal, what’s coming up in the immediate future for Cash Money?
Birdman: Well, we got a big roster coming next year. Nicki’s coming out…Tyga, Twist, Bow Wow, myself, Kevin Rudolph, Jay Sean. Wayne got another album, everybody. I mean, we’re gonna drop 10 to 14 albums in the first six months of the year, so everybody’s cocked and loaded. It’s all about the music first, and everything else comes after that. It’s music with us and then whatever else.
We got other businesses that we’re doing, like the books, studio, buses, movies, touring. We’re out in Australia now, that’s why I’m on my way to the airport. Just gearing up for different adventures and trying our best to be the best and make money in different ways and the same ways.
AllHipHop.com: OK, does a hustler ever get to take a vacation? [laughter] What do you do for pleasure?
Birdman: I swear I haven’t took a vacation in 22 years! I wanna take one, but I don’t know, that ain’t never been in my mindset, you know? I try to be a family man with my kids and give them whatever they want. I try to be there as much as possible. I love my family, my grandkids, they mean the world to me. God and my family come before everything, then music, so I’ll be able to take one. I ain’t old, I’m young, so if I get that “B” [billion] within the next couple of years, I’m cool, I’m straight. And also, we living a hell of a life, getting’ that, so we playing with hundreds of millions of dollars, so ain’t nobody complaining!
50 Cent Ready to Pump His Fist With Jersey Shore DJ!
If only that headline were a joke, but it appears it is very much a reality. It was announced earlier today (December 2), that Jersey Shore cast member Pauly D, or DJ Pauly D as he is referred to in the music world, has just inked a deal with 50’s G-Note Records, which specializes in Dance and Pop music. There were talks of this happening earlier in the year, but now it is official. He joins a roster that includes Hot Rod, Genasis, and singer Lea. Not only did 50 call Pauly D smart and creative, he also said that he is a “great addition to the G-Note and G-Unit family.” Riiiiiiight.
In other 50 news, he revealed via Twitter that his new project/EP, The Big 10, will be released next Friday, December 9, at Noon!
Kanye Talks About His Funeral and Grammy “Snub”:
“I was just thinking about my funeral and stuff a couple days ago and thinking who would be at the funeral…People who I want to be in the funeral? I wanna have world leaders that were, like, affected, that said, you know, ‘Kanye gave me my shot here.’ Or ‘he pushed me,’ or ‘he told me to believe in myself,’ or ‘when I saw this, it made me feel like that.’ I wanna affect people like that when I, like, pass away.”
For “Rap Album of the Year,” which one takes home the Grammy: My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy or Watch The Throne??? Sound off!
Quickies:
-Kid Cudi’s “rock-oriented” album WZRD is officially complete according to his Twitter: “WZRD is completed. Mixing and mastering as we speak! Accomplished.” The first single is called “Teleport 2 Me”.
-Despite the Bey-Z camps saying that the first baby of Hip-Hop isn’t due until February, some people are suggesting that the baby could be arriving as soon as this month!
-J. Cole’s Cole World: The Sideline Story has been certified Gold!! Congratulations are in order for Cole who also just got nominated for “Best New Artist” at the Grammy’s!
-VH1 has just green-lit a made-for-TV biopic about girl group TLC that should air sometime in 2012. Group member Chili said, “The reality of this brings me to tears because I am seeing one of my dreams come to life. I always felt our story had to be told.” Looks like you’ve got some more checks coming, T-Boz!
-Toymakers Mattel have just announced that they’ll be creating a Nicki Minaj Barbie doll (yes, she also calls her fans “Barbies”) to auction off for charity next year.
-Big K.R.I.T. has announced that a new mixtape titled 4Eva & A Day will drop early next year before his Def Jam debut, Live From the Underground, is released.
-Buy a concert ticket through Ticketmaster in the past 10 years? If so, you could be getting refunded some cash along with a few million other people, thanks to the courts cracking down on the ludicrous fees they’ve been adding onto purchases for years.
(AllHipHop News) Mississippi rapper and Def Jam artist Big K.R.I.T. is hard at work on a new mixtape, “4Eva & A Day”, that will hit BigKrit.com early in 2012.
While many fans are still waiting for his official debut Live From The Underground, K.R.I.T. has been steadily at work and was recently featured on the collaborative single “I’m Flexin” featuring T.I.
“Based off the experience of touring in the past year I’m creating this free album from scratch as we speak. I have locked myself back in the studio– 4Eva & a Day coming soon on bigkrit.com,” K.R.I.T. told Pitchfork.
K.R.I.T. just finished up the Smokers Club Tour that featued Curren$y, Smoke DZA, Method Man, Fiend, Marcus Manchild and many others.
(AllHipHop News) Young Jeezy has never been shy when it comes to talking about his life. Yet, with TM103: The Documentary, Jeezy bares his heart, life, and soul at the feet of the industry, but foremost, the streets.
Last night (December 1) in Atlanta at the Landmark Midtown Art Cinema, Young Jeezy screened his new film, TM:103The Documentary on two screens to a receptive audience.
The film, which also comes inside of the album, is funny, while still poignant as Jeezy talks about his life.
Its deepest moments are when he talks about his mother. The two had a relationship that was beyond tense, and in his early teens, Jeezy, then just Jay Jenkins, Jr., left his mother’s home after an altercation where she pulled a gun on him.
Yet, his mother, Sharon Jenkins was present at the screening, and the two sat side-by-side for the entire film.
From his life as a drug hustler – a life that started at 11 – to his success as a rap artist, no subject is untouched, including his beef with Gucci Mane and his affliation with Big Meech and Black Mafia Family.
TM103: The Documentary also features appearances by Jay-Z, Diddy, Rihanna, and T.I., and is narrated by Samuel L. Jackson.
Thug Motivation 103, the album and documentary are in stores December 20.