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Hip-Hop Rumors: Nicki Talks Diddy Rumors! Swizz & Alica’s Baby Gets Blessed! N.E.R.D. Is P#####!

DISCLAIMER:

All content within this section is pure rumor and generally have no factual info outside of what the streets have whispered in our ear. Read on.

Send your rumors, sightings and ill pics to illseed at al*************@***il.com.

JAY-Z & EM ON THE ROOF!

Jay-Z and Eminem rock the the Roof at David Letterman show!

Give J. Cole some shine too! With Jay out there doing big things, let us not forget the understudy.

SWIZZ AND ALICIA HAVE THEIR BABY BLESSED!

This is nice.  Swizzy and A. Dot Keys had their baby blessed in Africa over the weekend. WOW.

JOE BUDDEN EXPLAINS

Here is what he said about the issues he faces with his label:

“Amalgam wants 2 albums, publishing, merchandising, exclusivity, rights to mm2 & 3, royalties, but they’d like ME 2 handle any sample clearance issues & they also would like for me to pay any front & back ends on the album, mixing & mastering outta pocket ….. etc btw…didn’t sign up 4 that….. i’ll retire b4 i ever conform 2 their s**t ….”

I have to agree with Joe on this one. That’s a case of the big, bad label taking advantage of that artist. They aren’t even big like that! Damn! Indies are acting like majors? They need to work something out and let their marquee artist go on to to big things with Slaugherhouse so he can come home and make them some money.

NICKI MINAJ ADDRESSES DIDDY RUMORS

She Talked To DJ Envy On Dating Diddy:

“That is, wait, can I just say, I hold everybody’s hands! I hold my bodyguard’s hands! Noooo [I’m not dating Diddy!] Listen, sometimes I think they know these things are false. But when people ask me, I think, ‘I didn’t even know I was gonna have to even address that.’ — when I’m ready [to announce new management], you’ll know.”

N.E.R.D. OFF INTERSCOPE?

I went over to www.yaheard.com and I saw a video of N.E.R.D.s new song being performed in London. The name of the song was “Help Me.” Apparently, they had some very strong language for Interscope Records. Not only were they dissing the house of Jimmy Iovine, they were biggin’ up Universal. They were praising Universal for supporting their new sound.

Here is the video.

SERIOUSLY, THIS HAS GOT TO STOP!

Normally, I would joke or something about signs the world is coming to an end, but this is insanity. Over the weekend, 54 people were SHOT in Chicago. Ten of those people were killed. ALL of the people that were victimized were BLACK men between 16-20. This is just out of control. I am no where near Chicago, but if you know anybody living that life, please try to deter it. Why Obama, who was politically bred in Chicago, isn’t doing more is a mystery. I am not going to run down all of the death and violence. You can CLICK HERE for that, but I am amazed at how society is spiraling downward so fast. Oh, and since they are Black boys and men…nobody cares. Real talk.

EMINEM PERFORMS IN NYC

Peep what I stole off of The Boombox:

Eminem stunned a crowd last night at New York’s Bowery Ballroom, taking the stage for a secret performance at the end of a long night of battling MCs that also featured a set by Slaughterhouse. The occasion was Red Bull’s Emsee Battle: The Road to 8 Mile — a multi-city tour that pits battle rappers against each other in the ultimate cross country fight for supremacy on the mic.

 

The night kicked off around 10PM with eight MCs vying for the New York title. Within an hour, the field was narrowed down to two finalists named Quest MCody and DNA. The two rappers went hard at one another in a multi-round finals battle that showcased impromptu freestyles as well as classic battle spitting. DNA emerged as the clear victor as chosen by judges Just Blaze, Alchemist and Craig G.

DEAD PREZ IS BACK

      In celebration

of the 10 year anniversary of their debut album Let’s Get Free and the

release

of their DJ Drama hosted Revolutionary But Gangsta Grillz, dead prez

have tag teamed with director James Wade (Russel Simmons,

Dungeon Family, Outlaws) and produced a series of creative visual promos

to

share with their worldwide fanbase. Supporters,bloggers and press can

watch, collect and share

all 8 promos at www.deadprez.com.

Dead prez is also currently in production with director

James Wade on a new reality tv pilot series called Global Hood that

features

exclusive access to their RBG lifestyle as they tour around the globe.“The Beauty Within”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yN7YdnK5CbQ

MASHONDA, WE LOVE YOU! HOLD ON! DON’T GO CRAZY!!!!!

They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!

-illseed

WHO: illseed.com

WHAT: Rumors

WHERE: AllHipHop.com, MySpace.com/TheIllseed

HOW: Send your rumors and ill pics to illseed at al*************@***il.com.

Trae Taps Lupe, Wacka Flocka, DJ Khaled For 2010 “Trae Day”

(AllHipHop News) Houston, Texas rapper will host his third annual “Trae Day” anti-violence rally this July along with numerous rap stars and celebrities. This year’s “Trae Day” takes place at the former International Ballroom in Houston and includes an all-star lineup featuring Lupe Fiasco, Young Buck, Yo Gotti, Wacka Flocka, Sean Garrett and others. Sirius’ popular satellite radio personality Angela Yee will serve as the evening’s host, along with DJ Khaled, funnyman Lil’ Duval and former 93.3 jock Crisco Kidd. July 22nd was officially designated “Trae Day” in Houston, Texas for the rapper’s commitment to working with at-risk youth and Houston’s less fortunate. Ironically, last year’s event ended in violence when six people were shot and injured as the concert portion of the day was winding down. One man was eventually charged with engaging in organized crime and other charges and jailed. This year, Trae will preside over the “Stop Teen Violence” rally, to encourage Houston youth to find education and positive alternatives to express their anger or frustration. Trae’s non-profit, Angel’s By Nature, will sponsor train rides, pony rides and face painting for children at the free event, which is open to the public. Although admission is free, fans are encouraged to donate school supplies like pens, paper, markers, crayons, backpacks, folders, binders, etc.

Wiz Khalifa Sells Out Tour; Talks New Project

(AllHipHop News) Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania rapper Wiz Khalifa is touring heavily in support of his most recent mixtape Kush and Orange Juice and has sold out nearly every show of his most recent tour across the country. According to Wiz, 54 out of 57 shows on the nationwide “Deal or no Deal Tour” featuring Yelawolf and Wu-Tang member, U-God, have sold out completely.“People have been showing up. All of the tickets have been presale, a lot of them have been at the door and it’s been good,” Wiz told AllHipHop.com. “People are rocking merchandise, singing the words of the songs, there has been an ambulance at nearly every show outside.”When asked about some of the crazier things he has seen on the tour, Wiz stated that “the combination of people passing out and with all the things that people will do to get backstage, to just smoke with us. It’s gotten pretty crazy.”Wiz is currently working on his new album and despite rumors about what label will distribute the project, Wiz said he was weighing his options. “Everyone knows I have been busy on my tour, so as far as business moves I kind of have just held off and just getting things straight,” Wiz told AllHipHop.com. “I am back recording. “I have been recording for several weeks now and I like to start fresh and really get a vibe going. We got a vibe early and we are gonna kill ‘em.” Although the album has a titled, Wiz Khalifa remained tight-lipped about the name and concept of his upcoming project. “It’s going to be an event, just like anything else that I do and I think that each one of my projects that we drop is getting bigger and better.”Wiz Khalifa’s next appearance will take place on July 9th in Milwaukee, WI at a venue called The Rave.

Jay-Z, Rich Righteous Teacher (Part II)

Click here for Part I

“Jay-Z can market just about everything but a breakfast cereal because he’s got huge talent and a savvy business manager, John Meneilly, a former Provident Financial executive.”

New York Post; May 16, 2010; ‘Jay-Z’s 99 problems’

Please, can we stop being so spooky about Jay-Z, for just a few minutes?

Let me offer an approach to calm the hysteria down.

With all due respect to the conspiracy theorists and groupies on one hand, and the established Hip-Hop and mainstream media on the other – in 2010, anyone’s analysis or critique of Jay-Z’s career has little credibility with me if it does not factor in the role that John Meneilly – his business manager and adviser has played in it. It is actually a supreme compliment to Jay-Z and John Meneilly and a discredit to the journalism profession that the most talked about celebrity in the history of the Hip-Hop culture and industry has the least talked about business manager. Sadly, it is a sign of two things: how ignorant of business the Hip-Hop culture continues to be and why its media – talk shows, magazines and blogs – have little to offer those seeking to find a way through a global recession and music industry in transition. Last I checked as of the date of this writing there was not even a Wikipedia page entry on the man arguably most responsible, other than Jay-Z, for certain key business moves he has made. Nor, are there hardly any pictures of him on the Internet.

Is this a conspiracy of silence (being executed by Jay and John) or just one of ignorance (on all of us in the culture and industry who are fascinated and distracted by the wrong things)?

One of the reasons why I don’t superficially engage the talk of Jay-Z’s success allegedly being a result of his membership in some secret society (a subject Jay lyrically addresses on a hot new just recorded track…stay tuned) is because I know that the ignorance of business looms so large in the chatter that dominates rap music, that it is very difficult to have a rational and calm discussion over why certain artists are more commercially ‘successful,’ than others.

The mere mention of the name ‘Jay-Z,’ causes people to become irrational and unable to think logically, it seems (smile).

An example of this is the reaction to the word ‘righteous,’ in the title of this article. Righteous does not only refer to basic morality, it also has an application in terms of whether something is in harmony with nature, science and universal order. That so few people understand business and persuasive communication (which Jay has ‘mastered’ to a degree) to be age-old sciences and elements of human nature is a clear indication about the larger problem in how we in Hip-Hop narrowly define ‘consciousness,’ only in terms of book knowledge, morality and activism. This is an area where ideology (socialism vs. capitalism as the beginning of economic thought) has blinded us to the fact that trade and commerce pre-date Adam Smith and Karl Marx. (I’ve never understood how scholars, activists, and ‘conscious’ artists who claim Africa ignore the thousands of years of its economic history in favor of being parrots of these two schools of Western economic thought.)

If you understand that and how the people from whom Jay-Z comes were systematically denied business education (not to mention capital, wages and freedom of association) for nearly 400 years (while Marx and Smith supporters were formulating ‘capitalism’ and ’socialism’) Jay-Z is a ‘righteous’ teacher – enlightening us to certain sciences in life – in ways people simply don’t understand because of how we have been mis-educated.

So, until and unless certain aspects of Jay-Z’s business model are examined people will never get the benefit of what he represents for the good of us all – important lessons (for better or worse).

I am not writing this as an intellectual observer or outsider. I know it from within as a music industry professional – serving as part of the management of Wu-Tang Clan, and today as a business consultant.

I am not the greatest expert on the Wu nor have I ever claimed to be. But because I know my place in that history and don’t step out of it, I can explain some things accurately to others.

There are many things that journalists and die-hard Wu-Tang Clan fans know about the group, its music, lyrics, and its cultural impact that I do not know.

But when it comes to certain aspects of the business side of things – for a certain period of time if you don’t talk to RZA, Divine, Power, Mook, myself, and a handful of others that were in a position to know, as part of the administrative and team infrastructure of the group you simply cannot understand the music career of the Clan (during a certain period of time).

When it comes to Jay-Z’s success there is simply too much conjecture floating around for us to learn the valuable lessons that his approach to business can teach us.

A look at his business manager can help end some of the speculation and even mysticism around Jay-Z and go a long way toward educating the youngest members of the Hip-Hop generation about business, while improving the stategies and tactics of other artists who continue to hustle backwards.

I will never forget the day I met John Meneilly a few years ago. I actually had to be toldhandling his business. who he was. After shaking hands with a very non-descript Caucasian who looked a bit disheveled, with a briefcase and documents he had to maneuver in order to greet me, my business associate (with whom John Meneilly had just met) told me whom I had just spoken with. In other words there was nothing flamboyant, loud, eccentric, distracting, or vain about Jay-Z’s business manager, although these are the characteristics many ascribe to the artist himself. And this man did not introduce himself to me as ‘Jay-Z’s business manager.’ In other words, he felt no need to impress or make himself memorable. He was just

John Meneilly perfectly fits the low-key profile of what Thomas J. Stanley describes in the book, The Millionaire Mind.

I recognize this as an important lesson in how Jay-Z does business. It was the first thing I was taught – when only 22 years old – by my business mentor (whom I write about in Volume II of my book) who told me that the clients and artists that I would one day manage wanted to know that I could go places that they couldn’t. In John Meneilly, Jay has that someone ‘who can go places he can’t.’ That alone separates him from the legions of ‘commercial,’ ‘conscious,’ and ‘independent’ artists who simply do not know how to build a proper team infrastructure.

The artists who are going to survive this transition period are going to be the ones who pick the right managers and advisers to help guide their careers within and without the music industry caste system. I describe this a bit in connection to the emergence of the 360 record label deal in a November 9, 20009 Hip-Hoppreneur ™ Commentary “Chris Lighty Is Not A Sell Out! The Music Industry Caste System” (http://www.cedricmuhammad.com/chris-lighty-is-not-a-sell-out-the-music-industry-caste-system-hip-hoppreneur-%E2%84%A2-commentary-november-4-2009/):

“You see there is a caste system in the industry.

And this reality opens the door for some frank talk about the emergence of the 360 Deal and why it is poised to put managers out of business, or out of their own misery, depending upon your perspective.

Now when I say ‘caste system’ I don’t have the country of India in mind, but only a system of rigid division and separation characterized by a custom of social barriers.

Yes, there are real social barriers in the music industry and the success and failure of artists is dependent upon their ability and that of their team infrastructure of managers, agents, lawyers, and publicists to navigate it.

On one end of the caste system we have the unsigned talent; in the middle of this power pyramid we have the independent artist; and at the top of the social system is the elite artist signed to a major record label.

Each of the three have their own forms of power and spheres of influence that make them valuable in the marketplace.

The unsigned talent has freedom, purity, and unlimited upside and potential.

The independent artist has greater creative control and a larger share of the revenue they generate.

The elite major label artist has social mobility at the higher levels of the industry and access to corporate machinery and a professional network.

Each of the three also have major vulnerabilities.

The unsigned talent initially has a prescribed minimum market value they must accept in contracts and deals if they are to enter the industry as a signed artist.

The independent artist rarely has the professional infrastructure and business process necessary to achieve success beyond a critical ‘underground’ (“I keeps it real”) commercial mass. Some rationalize their lack of achievement by saying they don’t care about ‘going gold or platinum,’ but privately they lament over the inefficiencies in their business organizations and the barriers that hinder them. In addition, their ‘independent’ status, ‘hoodonomics and love for progressive politics or revolutionary rhetoric often limits their social mobility and alienates them from key music industry power centers and decision-makers in the industry who are afraid of upsetting special interests.

The elite major record label artist, having been thoroughly mainstreamed, is ‘boxed in’ to standard contractual deals, a stereotypical marketing image, and conservative or risk-averse business opportunities. And at times, their penchant for networking toward the top of the industry power pyramid, although a necessary and sound business practice, when unbridled (i.e. getting business done is more important than dating a model), opens them up to charges of excessive materialism.

The strongest position an artist can be in, nowadays, especially in the era of the 360 deal is that of the emerging independent artist.

This person is not established to the point where their image has hardened but not so new that they haven’t demonstrated the ability to market and sell their own music, and generate not just buzz but some level of mainstream visibility (through earned media, social and viral communities, and either radio play or video rotation on mainstream outlets).

But the emergence of this kind of new independent artist becomes more difficult everyday as the 360 deal threatens to place the vast majority of artists at the bottom of the music industry power pyramid, cutting them off from key power centers and the ladder of mobility.

The individuals best suited to turn the tide are the managers (aka ‘the 20Percenters’), who understand the caste system and have more mobility than the artist, in the name of business. They are best positioned to establish the right relationships that new artists are now being denied (except they go through a label), and only they have the right mix of know how, skill sets and networks to construct a new ladder and business infrastructure outside of the industry, if need be, to counter the majors’ grip on market share.

Many don’t want to admit it but it is so obvious to me – what usually separates the major artist from the independent and unsigned is their better success in the selection of the right team ‘who can go places they can’t.’ While I do believe that the artist with the most potential to shine this decade is not the major artist, but rather the independent one, it will only be the independent artist who can build the right team around them capable of making things happen outside of the old music industry infrastructure that will thrive.

A common mistake that I see over and over again with independent and progressive artists is that as much as they criticize the elite major artists, they remain fascinated by them and adopt their conservative business practices, and are seduced into hiring their teams.

The independent, progressive and ‘conscious’ artist needs management and a team that can make ‘independent,’ ‘progressive,’ and ‘conscious’ things happen for them, on a business level.

As I often say to conscious artists – why do you rap so much about Africa when you don’t have a team around you who can make things happen for you in Africa on a business or cultural level?

While the ‘conscious’ artist is good at pointing out the contradictions in the lyrical content of an artist like Jay-Z, they are not so good in pointing out the contradictions between their own lyrical content and the manner in which they do business.

In this sense, again, Jay-Z exhibits a form of knowledge of self that they lack.

*****

“I came into this moth——– a hundred grand strong

Nine to be exact, from grindin G-packs

Put this s— in motion ain’t no rewindin me back

Could make 40 off a brick but one rhyme could beat that

And if somebody woulda told ‘em that Hov’ would sell clothin

Heh, not in this lifetime, wasn’t in my right mind

That’s another difference that’s between me and them

Heh, I’m smarten up, open the market up

One million, two million, three million, four

In eighteen months, eighty million more

Now add that number up with the one I said before

You are now lookin at one smart black boy

Momma ain’t raised no fool

Put me anywhere on God’s green earth, I’ll triple my worth…

I WILL NOT LOSE!…”

Jay-Z; “U Don’t Know”

Something that I think gets lost in the ideological criticism of Jay-Z or the fascination with his celebrity is that no other rapper is more capable of sparking as much intelligent conversation, especially about entrepreneurship, economics and business, which I dare say is more essential right now than the political form of consciousness we’ve received in rap for over 20 years. Whether you like Jay-Z or not he is at the center of a consciousness-raising discussion in a badly underserved area: our definitions of ‘success’ and the science of business (which too many people incorrectly equate to ‘capitalism’: you can listen to my interview with Dr. Jared Ball where I explain the difference between business, entrepreneurship, trade and commerce on one hand and ‘capitalism’ on the other at: http://www.voxunion.com/?p=2588)

Here is what an AllHipHop.com reader named Dalitso emailed me regarding Part I:

”Since I was 12 I’ve been a huge fan of Jay I’ve grown on his experience to the point

almost every discussion I have with friends has a recital of a Jay

song. I’m the butt of jokes among friends but to watch someone come

from nothing towards the most influential statesman in a counter

culture is remarkable. I often think of an eastern proverb that says

“don’t follow in the footsteps of the great, seek what they sought” Jay

reminds me of Meyer Lanksy not from the media perspective but from the

lens of a minority marginalized in society and creates something. The

‘American Gangster’ album to me is his most underrated album but the

jewels on human nature, business in the album for cultural

entrepreneurs, social activist, marketing students, to me is crazy from

the intro to the last song among the many favorite lines on No Hooks

is “own boss, own your master, slaves the mentality I carry with me to

this very day, f*** rich let’s gets wealthy who else gonna feed we. If

I need it I’m gonna get it however God help me”. His realization that

as an artist freedom comes from owning his own masters, and breaking

the master slave mentality of being tied down to dying industry

structure coupled with that anybody can get rich but wealth is for the

few who understand that “money should work for you while you sleep”

and not you working for money and that is the difference between a

master and slave mentality.”

I asked Duane Lawton, an Internet Hip-Hop Marketing Consultant who has actually written a book on Jay-Z’s lyrics (http://www.bookofhov.com/ email: Du***@*******ov.com) for his thoughts on Jay-Z’s business model and brand.

Duane Lawton: My favorite Jay-Z saying is “I WILL NOT LOSE!” It’s a simple

declaration that can be very self-empowering especially for

those who have been made to believe that they were born to

fail. I think success in anything, particularly business and

branding starts with what I would call “stubborn confidence”

this is not to be confused with “blind ambition”.

Often times it’s not enough to have faith or confidence. There

are too many things in life that can hinder us from accomplishing

our goals. Sometimes you have to be stubborn with confidence,

almost defiant. And Jay-Z’s trademark, “I WILL NOT LOSE”

epitomizes that approach to ambition.

If you combine 2 of Jay-Z’s most popular trademark sayings, you

have the perfect mantra to live by as you seek personal and professional

growth and development:

If I… “Get my mind right”, “I WILL NOT LOSE!”

It’s amazing to see how Jay-Z has applied the theories and practices of

street hustling all the way to the corporate boardroom and the global

business environment. In some ways Jay-Z can be seen as a life coach

with a specialization in business and professional development. Of course

I’m speaking metaphorically about a MC who is a master at metaphors,

but the point is, Jay-Z has truly given our culture and generation a

blueprint- not just on how to make Hip-Hop music, but more importantly,

on how to conceive, believe, achieve and maintain success in whatever we do.

*****

Having established Jay-Z’s inspirational value and ability to teach business principles, directly and indirectly there are some very hard questions that I believe Jay will be forced to answer regarding his relationship to the classes (the 10%), his concern and influence over the masses (the 85%) and just how free he is to openly associate with other righteous teachers (the 5%).

This all has to be considered in light of his recent statements from last year which seem to indicate his interest in further evolving the culture and industry in more mature ways:

“The challenge with rap music is, you know, the place where it’s white hot is with 16- and 15-year-olds. You have a lot of people who are 30-something, 30-plus, still recording music like they were 15 because that’s where the most urgent buyer is…There’s been this reluctance to mature in hip hop and when you do that, you leave the audience very narrow. My whole thing is to expand the audience and the genre of music in any way, because music is music…If I’m 35 years old and I’m talking like I’m 15 — the kids at 15, they change slang every week. They know that’s not being authentic. I live in Teaneck, New Jersey, somewhere, I’m not on the streets…I felt like that was my calling and that was my direction in life, to show artists in a different light, that we could ascend to executive positions of record companies….In the beginning, it was at its purest form because everyone was struggling. All great music and all great art, I believe, comes from pain. As hip hop started to get successful, and really successful — you had these guys coming from these neighbourhoods that were now millionaires — it’s tough to draw back to that place [of creativity]…. Now people are having those types of feelings: ‘You’re sounding lazy, you’re sounding formulaic, you’re sounding like the same subject matter. So what are you going to do?’ Now we’re facing that challenge to make great music like every other genre.”

Will the ‘great music’ that Jay-Z makes next, be considered ‘radical’ by some in high places?

A hidden hand – coming from outside of the micro music industry and often working through the multi-national conglomerates that own it – with resources to control who gets the psychic income of fame (scandal-free media coverage, high level political access, and first crack at non-music industry business opportunities) has subtly and not so subtly made it clear to elite artists and their team that doing for self – in a certain sense – is incompatible with upward social mobility, in their world.

Thus, the fear of loss of status and ‘mainstreaming’ controls many and limits the effectiveness of those who aren’t afraid.

Jay-Z figures Some How, Some Way, into this important debate.

“I do this for my culture

To let ‘em know what a n***a look like…when a ni***a in a Roadster

Show ‘em how to move in a room full of vultures

Industry shady it need to be taken over

Label owners hate me, I’m raisin’ the status quo up

I’m overchargin’ n***az for what they did to the Cold Crush

Pay us like you owe us for all the years that you ho’ed us

We can talk, but money talks, so talk mo’ bucks”

Jay-Z; “ IZZO (H.O.V.A.)”

Dame Dash and I discussed this dynamic and dilemma – just how independently elite artists can be while operating in the ‘system’ at BlackElectorate.com in 2002, at the height of Roc-A-Fella’s popularity and prior to his public break with Jay-Z (http://www.blackelectorate.com/articles.asp?ID=744 ):

Cedric Muhammad: The way I have looked at it from an economist’s point of view, it seems that the pace of the distribution channels, even of the multinational corporations at the center of your business ventures, is really too slow for you.

Dame Dash: Right.

Cedric Muhammad: It seems to me that everything that you are involved with from your music relationship with Def Jam and Universal to the movie business – you are like, really bumping up against Black America’s crisis of not having distribution for its products and services. How do you feel about all of that?

Dame Dash: Well…I mean, you know it is a constant struggle. A little bit of a fight, because our culture doesn’t usually get the correct opportunities and when they are presented, somebody usually f—- it up. Someone is there putting their hands into the cookie jar. Our culture has been exploited so much that we haven’t been able to capitalize on things. So many other people make so much money off of us that I don’t think that they are used to someone trying to capitalize on their own culture, you know what I’m saying? So its full of obstacles. But the s— that bothers me is that I know that I am a strong individual and I fight for what’s mine, but I know that there are alot of people in this who are not like that. Not to say that other people aren’t as strong but they don’t have the kamikaze attitude and as much to fall back on as I do.

That’s why I kind of feel sorry for anybody that can’t take the position that I hold. But I will punish anybody that I feel is doing anything disrespectful to my company. You are a liability not just to me but everybody else.

Cedric Muhammad: Do you think, Dame, that there is more unity required to overcome the distribution issues that you are dealing with in music, movies and alcohol…

Dame Dash: Yeah…

Cedric Muhammad: Who are some of the people that you are looking to link up with and what are the type of business minds that it would require to get over this hump?

Dame Dash: I feel like it is kind of hard because everybody is trying to get in where they fit in, you know what I’m saying? And as established as people may seem, they are still on shaky ice. So they have their own things that they gotta deal with. Like right now, I haven’t gotten the opportunity to address the distribution issue in the music industry because it would take alot of energy and effort. I will probably get back to that when I can. It is important that I do. I am happy that I got to make money my way, but when you get into distribution, it gets a little gangster, you know what I’m saying?

(laughter between both Dame Dash and Cedric Muhammad)

Dame Dash: You’ve got to be really serious about going for distribution and getting it done. And it is hard to put someone in that position.

*****

Could Jay-Z support an effort to address the long-discussed ‘distribution’ issue (which now must include things like ownership of concert venues, and control of transportaion and communication systems)? Or would his business and corporate partners consider it too radical a step for him?’ And if he came out and took a stand on something like this would politically conscious and so-called radical artists be able to get over their hang-ups with Jay and support him? I wonder on all three questions.

How many of us have heard of the ‘secret’ or private discussions of Hammer, James Prince, Suge Kinght and Luke in the 1990s to establish an independent distribution network in the music industry?

Hip-Hop historian and opinion leader Davey D (http://daveyd.com/) is the most knowledgeable person I know on the subject.

Isn’t it so interesting that it was artists/moguls with a ‘gangster’ or ‘commercial’ persona and not ‘conscious’ artists who were having this private, even revolutionary discussion?

Again – there has and continues to be an economic aspect missing from what we have labeled ‘consciousness’ in Hip-Hop.

*****

Look at Dame’s description of his peers, in my conversation with him – “everybody is trying to get in where they fit in…” and “…as established as people may seem, they are still on shaky ice…” and the ultimate, “Not to say that other people aren’t as strong but they don’t have the kamikaze attitude and as much to fall back on…”

Hmmm. Sounds a lot like the mentality and attitude of most folks I know with a job – whether in government, academia, or corporate America – scared to start a business until they are forced to by a sudden layoff or termination.

Is Jay-Z somewhere in that description? As powerful as he is can Jay-Z be ‘kept in line’ by a powerful elite who has the power to ‘scandalize’ him – as well as you and I? All of us have flaws, imperfections, lifestyle choices, and habits, that if made public, distorted, or incorporated in a slanderous media campaign would demagnetize our appeal to the masses (the 85%).

As we near the 1-year anniversary of his death, we would do well to watch/study Minister Farrakhan’s insightful talk on Michael Jackson (“The Crucifixion of Michael Jackson and All Responsible Black Leadership” http://store.finalcall.com/ProductDetails.asp?ProductCode=HLF090726DVD)

Could Jay-Z one day be ‘crucified’ like Michael? Or, was Michael Jackson made to serve as an example for Jay-Z? And do the forces who feared Michael Jackson’s evolution toward greater and greater consciousness have similar concerns about Jay-Z (and all ‘mainstream’ rap artists)? Is there a form of consciousness that Jay-Z has that the 10% recognize and fear, which the more politically conscious artists still lack and can’t appreciate about him, yet?

Much has been made of Jay-Z’s recording of Public Service Announcements (PSAs) against ‘Anti-Semitism’ with Russell Simmons a few years ago. You can watch the YouTube video here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JNFXHoaf4Vs.

Personally, I have no problem with Jay-Z’s actual words in the PSA. I agree with them.

However, I would hope that Jay-Z and Russell Simmons would support or be involved in a similar effort to ask Jewish celebrities to record commercials geared toward those, for example, in Israel today, who are currently calling President Obama an ‘anti-Semite.’ (http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-20000658-503544.html)

If Jay-Z (and Russell Simmons) could publicly call for an end to the ‘anti-Black’ feelings that some members of the Jewish community do in fact hold, I would consider the cipher complete.

But there is more to consider:

Those who are calling Jay-Z a Zionist ‘pawn’ for making the PSAs, to the best of my knowledge, have not approached him in the same manner as the organization behind them did – Rabbi Marc Schneier’s Foundation For Ethnic Understanding did (http://www.ffeu.org/RMS.htm)

Until we give Jay-Z a chance to similarly accept or reject his appearance in a well-developed PSA campaign against Jewish ‘anti-Blackness,’ I will withold judgement on who’s a pawn…or a bishop, or a rook, and for whom.

Can we really blame Jay-Z for our own lack of operational unity, professionalism, and activism?

Again, we have to move beyond rhetoric (‘Jay-Z needs to support this…Jay-Z needs to stand for that…Jay-Z ain’t doin enough for…’) and speak the language of power, and make it impossible for Jay-Z (or any other artist) to say ‘no’ to us.

Jay-Z is not ‘anti-Jewish’ or ‘anti-Semitic’ but he didn’t do the PSA only because he agreed with the message. He did the PSA because it dovetailed with his business model and interests. I’m sure it didn’t hurt his relationship with members of the Israeli and Jewish community (in and out of the music industry with whom he may do business) that as was reported in Ynetnews, “The Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem received a report on the [Jay-Z’s PSA against ‘anti-Semitism’] initiative from Aryeh Mekel, Israel’s consul-general in New York.”

This is the real world of geopolitics Jay-Z has to operate in, not the one of Hip-Hop gossip where subliminal shots in his lyrics are considered earth-shattering breaking news to many of us.

When Black and progressive activism approaches Jay-Z in a manner that dovetails with his business model and interests – and not just loud shouting and whining – he will respond accordingly, I believe.

He understands the language of power, so let’s learn to speak it, as others have.

I am certain Jay-Z loves his people. But his people also have to understand the world he operates in.

If we love Jay-Z (which I certainly do) and want him to do better or more – we too – have to step up our game.

Political activism without an appreciation of business realities is going to increasingly be… well, D.O.A.

*****

“Yo, y’all n—–s truly ain’t ready for this “Dynasty” thing

Y’all thinkin “Blake Carrington”, I’m thinkin more like “Ming”

I got four nephews, and they all write’n

They all young and wild, plus they all like things

And I’m havin a child, which is more frightning

What cha’ll about to witness is big business kid

Big bosses, cocky, and big Benzsesses

Come through flossin’em shiny rims it is

And losses don’t pop up in their sentences

I think you understand what type of event this is

I don’t think you know how focused young Memphis is

or how Sigel’s so real, when you add on Amil

This is much more than rap, it’s Black Entrepreneurs

Clothing, movie, and films, we come to conquer it all

Roc-A-Wear, eighty mill like, eighteen months

You could bull—- wit rap if you want, mut———s

When it’s all said and done, we gon see what’s what

Holla at Hov, I’ll be in the cut…”

Jay-Z; “4 Da Fam”

In an interview earlier this year, 50 Cent made an important criticism of Jay Z’s business model which I think has merit. 50 said, “I think he has good intentions – Jay – but he’s using the traditional corporate model and I think the only place he really went wrong was saying ‘La Familia’ – like we [the Roc-A-Fella artists and Jay-Z] are family…I understand that transition into the corporate space. Like Jimmy (Iovine) (doesn’t) say (to me), ‘we family,’ so I know that I got to be on my P’s and Q’s with him 24/7, because if you are no longer generating interests there will be that ‘new thing,’ that works (to replace you). But I say that (‘family’) and because I say that I make sure that they (the G-Unit artists) eat.”

I literally could write a book on what 50 Cent describes (and in a way my forthcoming book on the economic integration of Africa deals with this subject) regarding the ‘corporate’ vs. ‘family’ way of doing business, and the painful transition of evolving economic relationships from personal to impersonal contact. They – family and corporation – are almost never the same, and when people confuse the two they go wrong. Kinship systems which revolve around familiarity and a common belief and loyalty are not the same as a nexus of impersonal transactions.

Both systems have a hierarchy with a leader at the top, but kinship systems unlike corporations, almost always raise their leadership from within their own ranks while corporations pull in outsiders. The leader of a ‘family’ group is usually looking for his ‘successor’ from among the younger members of their own circle. While earning money important, other qualities are a factor too. While, in a corporation, earning can be everything. Family members expect charity to take place among one another. In a corporation, charity has no place on financial statements – not even as ‘petty cash.’ (smile)

A young person who doesn’t understand this and is really operating in a corporate structure while believing they are part of a family unit is headed for disappointment, even to the point of feeling they were deceived by the leader of the unit.

This may have been part of the dynamic in Jay’s business model and leadership style at Roc-A-Fella and where the role of John Meneilly (and not the more ‘family-oriented Dame Dash or Biggs) is important to understand.

I know a small bit of this dynamic, because in September 2002 I was involved in a dialogue with Roc-A-Fella’s marketing department about how to better position all of the artists on the label, aside from Jay-Z. The strategy was sophisticated but revolved around coordinating an ‘outside the industry,’ strategy with the standard record promotion.

The plan I laid out was the re-positioning Cam’ron and Beanie Sigel, not just as ‘hustlers’ and ‘gangsters,’ but as real power brokers and true ‘bosses’ in the communities from which they came – Harlem and Philly, respectively. What we discussed was revolutionary and would have built upon the street credibility of the artists and converted that form of power into others – in the business sector and political arena. They would have been true shot-callers with their neighborhoods as home base from which they would make power moves, generate positive media coverage, and break into new market segments as artists. The plan would have made them bigger and broadened their appeal beyond their current fan base.

Roc-A-Fella loved the specifics of what I outlined. Cam’ron’s manager wanted to move forward with the strategy and all that remained was for a meeting to be arranged to finalize details. Then, we agreed, we would immediately apply the model to Beanie Sigel.

Then, came the surprising news, confirming for me what I had only heard as rumors regarding how decisions were made at Roc-A- Fella Records.

I was informed that Jay-Z’s brilliant business manager, John Meneilly, who was a key decision-maker at the label (a fact that many don’t realize) put the initiative on ice because it would somehow distract or interfere with Jay-Z’s efforts to position himself more positively in community affairs. I was told by Roc-A-Fella that John Meneilly felt that what I proposed was essentially the same thing that was already in motion around Jay-Z’s efforts to do things in the borough of Brooklyn, timed perfectly with the release of Blueprint II.

I was told that all of this would be the subject of an upcoming 60 Minutes feature on Jay-Z. My Roc-A-Fella contact told me that after Jay-Z had the chance to establish himself in this new light, the label would look to incorporate my strategic advice.

I was disappointed a bit, not understanding why what was good for Jay-Z wasn’t good for his labelmates, but I was also excited to know that someone as influential as Jay-Z was moving in this direction. I started thinking of ways to support his efforts.

The 60 Minutes special came (http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/11/18/60II/main529811.shtml), Blueprint II dropped and Jay-Z did get credit for a few good works. But the effort was heavily top-down (corporate –driven) nothing at all like what I proposed for Beanie Sigel and Cam’ron which would have had them building power and positioning themselves from the streets-up.

I’m sure 60 Minutes did not represent all that Jay-Z was trying to do but I got no indication that Roc-A-Fella pushed back or was disappointed in the feature that really was more of a biography piece designed to further mainstream Jay-Z or even, maybe make him less threatening.

It was a good look for Jay in that respect, but nothing that could benefit Beanie Sigel or Cam’ron, I thought.

Being ‘positive’ and ‘giving back’ through donations, foundations, corporate partners and appearances is nice but not the same as developing an artist’s street, political, and business leadership profile outside of the industry, in ways that connect them to everyday people and help them sell more records.

What Cam and Sigel needed was more power positioning not just good cause marketing.

*****

I ended Part I with this, “Could it be that certain people have a hard time accepting Jay-Z’s rise and continued success not because of anything he or others are doing but because they lack a grasp of the science of business?”

What I meant by that, is, the fascination with or focus on ‘secret societies’ among the poor can either be a hindrance to their progress or it can be an educational experience that motivates them toward success. The history of business is marked by private, interactions and relationships. You don’t get business done shouting at one another in the public (like a rap beef). You get business done by going in a room and closing the door and having serious discussion.

Either you or someone on your team has to be skilled at this kind of activity. I think this is something that is lost in rap culture where being flashy, attention-grabbing, and seen the most is valued too often.

In a sense, all business activity is based upon how one conducts themselves in private or cultural settings.

I wrote about this a few months ago for The Final Call newspaper in an article entitled, “Etiquette and Networking: The Secret Society of Business” (http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/Business_amp_Money_12/article_6647.shtml).

I hope you will read it and not only consider Jay-Z in a new light, but more importantly, yourself…

Cedric Muhammad is a business consultant, political strategist, and monetary economist. He is a former GM of Wu-Tang Management and currently a Member of the African Union’s First Congress of African Economist. He’s the Founder of the economic information service Africa PreBrief (http://africaprebrief.com/) and author of ‘The Entrepreneurial Secret’ (http://theEsecret.com/). Cedric can be contacted via e-mail at: cedric(at)cmcap.com

The Hipster Vs. The Hopster

The above illustration pretty much encompasses the characteristics of a hipster. For those not familiar with the term by now, the Urban Dictionary breaks it down:

Hipsters are a subculture of men and women typically in their 20’s and 30’s that value independent thinking, counter-culture, progressive politics, an appreciation of art and indie-rock, creativity, intelligence, and witty banter. The greatest concentrations of hipsters can be found living in the Williamsburg, Wicker Park, and Mission District neighborhoods of major cosmopolitan centers such as New York, Chicago, and San Francisco respectively.

Other key components? Perhaps a filthy pair of white Converse kicks, battered grey skinny jeans, vintage tees, Ray Bans, greasy hair and a beaten up bicycle—all which look like they were picked out of a dumpster, but are probably name brands with healthy price tags. Mary Kate OlsenNow, there is a newer breed of the hipsters called “hopsters”. Basically, while the hipster is more into indie rock, the hopster is likely to be into indie hip hop. The difference in style? The hopster favors colored denim, neon, bold graphic tees and flashy high tops. Their style is more retro 80s hip hop while the hipster is closer to the grungy 90s. New BoyzThe common denominator between the hipster and hopster? Skinny jeans! Check out how you can get both looks: Hipster: Thanaz Slim Straight Leg Jean by DieselStar Player Mid Top by ConverseKozac Straw Fedora by Goorin BrothersBruce Vu Tee by Cheap MondayHopster:Anarchy Robot Tee by KidrobotSlim Peex Jean by 55DSLStraight Jacket by Radii

Jay-Z Sued Over $250,000 Jet Bill

(AllHipHop News) Jay-Z is being sued by a private jet company, who claims the rap mogul failed to pay a $250,000 bill for flying. According to TMZ.com, Air Platinum Holding claims Jay-Z flew 18 hours in 2009, at a cost of $4,500-per-hour, at a cost of $81,000. Other costs Air Platinum is suing for include catering for 17 domestic flights for a total of $8,500, catering for 4 international flights totaling $3,000, International fees totaling $8,500 and taxes totaling $12,285.Air Platinum is also seeking another $24,200 from Jay-Z, for a luxury trip to England. The total bill Jay-Z owes is $137,485.00 plus almost another $100,000 in damages. Air Platinum was a company based in Miami, owned by Frenchman Mickael Cohen, who offered celebrities like Jay-Z, Paris Hilton and others, luxury concierge services. For $163,000 a customer could receive 15 hours of flight time for an entire 14-passenger Gulfstream GIV, to or from anywhere in the world. Additional perks included the use of Cohen’s 80-foot yacht, a condo at the Aqualine Resort and Spa and the usage of a variety of luxury cars. The company collapsed when it became entangled in a myriad of lawsuits, resulting in Cohen losing over $1.9 million dollars in the venture. `“All this mess, it’s only the revenge of my pilots because, we found a lot of breach of trust about the expenses, the hotels rooms, etc., because I’m French [they think] they can take what they want,” Cohen told the Miami Herald earlier this year.

Macy Gray: No Sell-Out

Macy Gray may be many things, but she’s a far cry from being a “sell-out.” Since her 1999 debut, she has pushed the envelope on commercial expectations and limitations on artists within the music industry complex.  And unintentionally, whether Macy knew it or not, her brilliant distinctiveness challenged music lovers – at the very same time – to recognize that the “beauty in the world” around us comes in varying shapes, sizes, sounds, and colors.

The Sellout stands as the fifth studio album in Macy Gray’s decade-plus career.  In the midst of a promotional tour for the album, the singer managed to squeeze some time out of her busy schedule and settle down for an interview with Clayton Perry – reflecting on marketing struggles, her purpose as an artist, and age discrimination within the music industry.

AllHipHop.com:  With three years passing since Big, your last release, is there a particular memory from The Sellout’s recording process that immediately comes to mind?

Macy Gray:  I was really nervous, especially following Big, you know.  It’s almost like when you know you have a baby on the way.  It’s one of those types of feelings – where you don’t know what’s going to happen. But it was really exciting to put this project together, since I haven’t been out for a while.

AllHipHop.com:  At the moment, the dance remix of “Beauty in the World” is currently No. 2 on Billboard’s Hot Dance/Club Play Songs – which is a career-high for you.  Considering the current economy, in conversation with others, what elements of the song do you think contributed most to the song’s success?

Macy Gray:  Those remixes are really amazing!  And content-wise, they’re pretty light, and people can really relate to the lyrics.  Sometimes we just need to sit back, enjoy the simple things in life, and be grateful.  Beauty surrounds us – in everything. But we just need to open our eyes and take a deep breath.

AllHipHop.com:  In some of the promotional materials for this album, you noted that “[you] spent over a year making this album without any pressure or opinions and being able to choose the co-writers, producers and artists that felt good to me.”  Throughout your career, is there a piece of advice or inspiration that allowed you to maintain your artistic integrity and be uncompromising on your individuality?

Macy Gray:  Well, I was on my own. I went in and started working on it on my own. And for the first time, in a long time, I didn’t have a label pressuring me, or anybody to answer to.  When you’re on a label, you always have meetings, and I didn’t have to go through any of that this time around.  It was really liberating, and it reminded me of what that was like to be artistically-free, and not have to worry about the influence other may have in what you are doing or the direction you are going.

AllHipHop.com:  Last week, I read your Huffington Post piece on age discrimination in the music industry.  When you reflect on your experience, what do you consider to be a blessing, or perhaps a curse, of being a mature artist in the music industry?

Macy Gray:  Everybody knows you have a shelf life. Like, for example, you can only be an athlete for so long.  So there is a lot of pressure.  People don’t really think about the music industry in that way. But we have to remember that music is for everybody.  There will always be an older generation of listeners.  And right now, agents and labels tend to ignore them.  And when you think about it, there are very few artists that are marketed to speak to them and their life issues.  So I never really got the point of why it is so important to be a teenager, and why the vast majority of music is tailored for them.  There are people in their 70’s with money to spend! [laughing]

AllHipHop.com:  When you hit your 40s, is there a particular insight that you gained about the music industry?

Macy Gray:  Yeah, definitely.  You learn to just be yourself and make music that makes you happy.  I’ve learned that you’ll always regret the compromises that you make along the way.  And you also evolve. So as you grow older, you become better. I’m a better singer, and a better songwriter, and I’m always trying to get better.  So even though I’m older, it doesn’t really make sense for me to turn away from music, simply because I am older.

AllHipHop.com:  Eleven years ago, you made your grand debut with the release of your first solo album, On How Life Is. Over the years, is there a particular song on The Sellout that you think is a shining example of your growth as a singer and songwriter?

Macy Gray:  I really like “Lately.”  That is one of my favorite songs.  But I really like my vocals on the whole album.  They may not be technically perfect all the time. But I really love the imperfections, too.

AllHipHop.com:  I’m a really big fan of “Lately” as well, and “Help Me,” too.  Those are my two favorite tracks on the album. If you don’t mind, walk me through the recording process for “Lately,” and shed some light on the inspiration behind the lyrics.

Macy Gray:   “Lately” – I recorded it with Kaz James, who is a big dance producer in Australia.  So automatically, with him, you are going to do an up-beat dance record.  But with me, he wanted to keep it completely organic. So it turned into a great disco track. But it’s completely 2010.  Right now, everybody is trying to make dance tracks.  But this song really sounds like modern disco.

AllHipHop.com:  And on “Help Me,” I really gravitated toward the lyrics, which spoke to me spiritually.  I can really feel the emotion when you cry out: “Am I going to heaven?”  Were these lyrics inspired by a personal experience, or an observation?

Macy Gray:  Yeah.  It’s all about the realization that you don’t ever know what’s going to happen to you, or what tomorrow holds for you.  You might be doing everything right, but them tomorrow some s**t could happen.  So all you can do in life is just get up and have as much fun as you can.

AllHipHop.com:  You have gone on record to state that “[y]our purpose as an artist is to make great music. To contribute.”  Was this a philosophy that was embedded in your spirit at an early age?

Macy Gray:  It was something that I really had to grow into.  When I first started out, I liked to party a lot, and just have a good time.  But now, I really have a new focus.  I want to be an artist that people can listen to twenty years from now.  I want to be one of those artists that when people are digging through their crates, they pull out one of my records from the attic, and it still speaks to them decades later.

AllHipHop.com:  Considering the fact that you have spent over a decade in the music business, what do you think has allowed you to have such longevity?

Macy Gray:  In life, you just gotta keep stepping.  No matter what happens, or how many people put you down, you just have to remember that you have a purpose.  In everything, you got to get up and keep going.  That is one thing I really learned from my parents.  Growing up in the ‘60s and ‘70s, I saw them go through a lot.  I don’t think I think about it a lot. But it’s something that I have always held with me – knowing that you have to keep on moving to get to where you want to go.

AllHipHop.com:  Those are some really good words of advice.  And when I think about your career, I have always respected your individuality and the fact that no one could ever put you in a box, mold, or genre. When you look over your career, what behind-the-scenes struggles have you had to overcome from a marketing standpoint?

Macy Gray:  I’m not your typical R&B girl in the industry. I don’t dress a certain way. I don’t wear any weave! [laughing] I’m just totally opposite. And it’s not for everybody. And I realize that. But that’s cool with me.  I’ve tried everything, and it really didn’t look right on me.  I get it.  That’s what’s hot. But not for me! [laughing continues]

For more information on Macy Gray, visit her official website: http://www.macygray.com/

Game: Black, White and Red All Over

Like a solider readying himself for war, Game and his entourage ride the elevator up to his trendy New York hotel room. Along the ride, he raps sporadically to the music in his headphone. “This year Halloween fell on a weekend. Me and Geto Boys trick-or-treatin,” he says. Later on that evening at the 2010 Hip Hop Honors: The Dirty South, with DJ Domination on the 1’s and 2’s, Game and Willie D (1/3 of The Geto Boys) would perform the classic hit, “My Mind Is Playing Tricks On Me”, in tribute to J Prince and Rap-A-Lot. Once inside the hotel, he appears exhausted. But in the midst of a 40-day promotional tour, who wouldn’t be? Nevertheless, he straightens up, puts on his professional hat and prepares to speak candidly about his past beef, music, Dr. Dre, his looming R.E.D. Album and a possible conspiracy against 50 Cent. AllHipHop.com: So you’re back with Interscope. Are you with Aftermath or is it just Interscope? What’s that whole situation like?Game: It’s a conglomerate of s**t. It’s Aftermath, its StarTraxx, Interscope, its Black Wall Street, its Goon Squad, it’s like everybody’s involved this time. It’s Geffen. It’s AllHipHop. Everybody. Yea.AllHipHop.com: Last time we talked, we talked about you album. Let’s talk a little bit about the album and refresh the reader’s memories.Game: Yea um, the album is titled R.E.D. And um, that’s R.E.D. for some folks and it’s pretty much a rededication of myself to music in general. To my fans and my life and my family. It’s like the re-birth or starting from the beginning if you will because everything this time around feels so brand new. AllHipHop.com: You and 50 have had a roller-coaster relationship since the beginning of your career. Where do you two currently stand, business-wise and/or personally?Game: Um, I think that in life anything can be mended. Right now, I haven’t talked to 50. I don’t talk to him but um, I’m not saying that that can’t happen in the future or that it will or won’t. But I think he’s fine doing him and I’m fine doing me. And if the stars ever aligned and if that day comes where we can have a conversation and then chop it up and we can come to some type of happy medium, you know, I’m wit’ it. But as of now, I guess he’s doing him and I’m doing me.AllHipHop.com:  A lot of people said that when you guys first peace’d it up that it was fake. Do you think it was just for publicity? Game: Nah, we uh, I think it was a situation where we both were not forced into it. But I think it was too early for that to happen. I think that if they would of let it [be], waited for a minute, let it simmer down and let us have a conversation which was needed, you know, then it would have been not so short-lived and had longevity to it. And we could have squashed it and got back in and worked. But that ain’t what happened. They wanted to do it like the next day. And there was still a lot of attention in the air and it just didn’t work but it definitely wasn’t staged. AllHipHop.com: Now, Dre is on the album right? He’s done a lot of work on the album, right?Game: Yea.AllHipHop.com: Have you heard Detox? Are you featured on the album at all? Game: Yea, I’ve done some work on Detox. I’ve also feature on some tracks. I don’t know which one will necessarily make it but yea I’ve been working on Detox.AllHipHop.com: Can you tell us what we have to look forward to? You know a lot of people wanna know…Game: (Smiles but remains tight-lipped) Nope. Ain’t nobody gonna tell you what’s up with Detox. AllHipHop.com: Any females in the industry that interest you right now? Professional and/or personally?Game: I think that uh, Nicki Minaj is on everybody’s radar. Just cause she’s like that new Lil’ Kim/Missy. I like her. Her vibe is cool. You know, all the young girls like her and they’re into her. So I think that that’s cool for Hip Hop. Personally, you know, I’m not interested in nobody. I’m just doing me, chillin’. I’m happy with my family and my kids and that’s it.

Game speaking on his willingness to work with 50 Cent again.

AllHipHop.com: Is there any reality T.V. in your future?

Game: Reality T.V.? I don’t think that my reality can be televised. My reality show, you would have to blur the whole screen. And it would have to be beep, beep, beep, beep, beep. It’s gonna sound like a traffic jam in New York.AllHipHop.com: What’s one of your biggest pet peeve?Game: I don’t like girls who wear open-toe sandals and have like corns on every foot. I think that you should just forever be in socks. You know what I’m saying? That kinda is just like, ewww.AllHipHop.com: Let’s talk a little about Twitter. Finish this sentence, #IfHipHopwashighschool…Game: #IfHipHopwashighschool then I’d probably be the bully. AllHipHop.com: Really? Why would you say that?     Game: Uh, because I mean in Hip Hop that’s what people label me as. I guess in the early stages of my career that’s what it seemed like it was. I was just speaking for other people. Yea, I’d definitely be the “bully” and “most likely to succeed” all at the same time. AllHipHop.com: Katt Williams tweeted a few days ago about how he doesn’t understand why celebrities don’t tweet with their fans. He feels like he can talk to celebrities at any given time. Do you actively respond to your fans?Game: As an entertainer, you can’t respond to every fan. I respond to my fans but I don’t have time to respond to everybody. And if you don’t respond to one person, then they get mad but they just don’t understand and they will never understand until they become a star and they see. But it’s difficult to juggle the family and then work and respond to fans. I do the best I can. And anybody that don’t like it, f### you. That’s how I see it.AllHipHop.com: I follow some pretty cool people. I follow The President. I follow Oprah. Everybody follows Diddy cause he’s always saying the cool s**t. I follow like about 300 people. AllHipHop.com: Drake’s album [“Thank Me, Later”] recently hit the streets. Have you had the opportunity to hear it?Game: I’ve heard a couple of tracks on it.AllHipHop.com: Do you think he’s gonna knock it out the park with this album?Game: I think the leak doesn’t matter. I think that, that kid is gonna do his numbers and it’s good for Hip Hop. So everybody just stop what you’re doing for a minute and cheer him on. Give him his lane and let him breathe. AllHipHop.com: Any interest in working with Drake?Game: Uh, it’s Hip Hop. You can look forward to it. It might happen and it might not. It’s Hip Hop and you never really plan to work with anybody. If I record something and I feel like it needs something, I’ll reach out. And vice versa.AllHipHop.com: I’m going say five names and/or words and I want you to tell me the first thing/word/phrase that comes to mind. Wacka Flaka. Game: Oletsdoit.AllHipHop.com: Barack Obama. Game: The man.AllHipHop.com: Betty White (Golden Girls).Game: Get crackin’!AllHipHop.com: Marijuana.Game: Love it.AllHipHop.com: The Game. Game: Life. Game reveals his pet peeves in women.

AllHipHop.com: The original Black Wall Street started out as something to help Blacks during some of the most strenuous times in African American culture. Had you researched the name before you decided to name your company that?

Game: I had already knew what was up with it. Yea.AllHipHop.com: Do you think you’ve fulfilled its legacy?Game: I think that I’ve don’t a lot for a lot of people. If not directly with my music. I’m motivating people and I’ve changed lives. And I’ve helped people see life in a different light. And I know it’s because I’ve gotten feedback from the fans when I see them, so I guess, I mean, I’m doing my part. But I’m not tarnishing it’s legacy or the name. Black Wall Street meant to me African Americans progressing and teaching and I feel like that’s what I’ve done.AllHipHop.com: What’s up with Black Wall Street? Any new artists to watch out for? Game: I got a couple of new artists I’m working with. I recently just signed Misson from New York, he’s out the Bronx. I got a kid name Mad Max from Englewood. He’s like the gangster Kid Cudi. But uh, he’s dope. Chick out of Watts names Canary. She’s pretty good. You know, if I meet somebody and they got the music and sparks for my ear, I’ma take it to the label and see what we can do.AllHipHop.com: Over the years you have expressed the need and/or urgency for music that is more political or that retains more sustenance. What do you think happened to the political landscape in Hip Hop?Game: I think Nas just took a break and it sort of disappears for a minute. Nas is the most political A-List artist and I think that whenever he takes breaks we’re gonna lose that aspect for a little while.AllHipHop.com: Have you gone political on this new album at all?Game: I’m pretty sure there’s always something. A line or two. Or half a song or a verse that you can describe or say it’s political. But I don’t get too much into politics. I just like making my music. AllHipHop.com: A lot of people are blaming Barack Obama for the oil-spill situation that’s going on right now. How do you feel about that?Game: Get off his d**k. AllHipHop.com: Are you bored with Hip Hop or do you still feel you have more to contribute?Game: I think that this point Hip Hop is pretty fun. And a lot of people don’t like these Wacka Flacka records or this Soulja Boy, you know, (raps) Pretty. Boy. Swagg. But I think it’s cool. I think it’s fun for the kids. And I think it’s dope. It goes hard in the clubs. I was just in the club last night having a ball to a bunch of the songs. A lot of people are like, oh, Wacka Flacka ain’t no emcee. I don’t think he’s tryna be an emcee. I think he’s tryna get it crackin’and have fun. When I’m in the club, I get it crackin’ and have fun to those songs. And I’m not looking for it to be Nas, I’m looking to have fun. And I think that’s what a lot of people get misconstrued by Hip Hop. It has different facets. Whatever you need, You go find it. If you’re looking for politics, then you listen to Nas or Talib Kweli or Mos Def. If you’re looking to have a good time, you go Soulja Boy or Drake and Ludacris and Pharell and all of those guys. Or if you want some hardcore then you go to me, Jeezy, Ross. Whatever you want, go find that and stop dissin’ people all the time.

The Game explains the old Black Wall Street and how he signed a “Gangsta Kid Cudi”

AllHipHop.com: Does Game do “The Dougie” in the club?

Game: I don’t know how to do “The Dougie”. Teach me how to Dougie. Teach me, Teach me how to Dougie.AllHipHop.com: We’ve seen how national politics affected Hip Hop in the 80s and 90s. How do you think national politics is affecting Hip Hop right now?Game: Um, I think that Hip Hop has gotten so big over the years, it is itself national politics. We’re directly involved because whatever happens in the world, we’re artists and we paint these pictures on our records and those politics are involved. It’s like when the earthquakes came, you got people mentioning it in their raps and the oil spill and Hurricane Katrina. We become directly involved  because we are multi-cultural writers and we’re always gonna involve world news.AllHipHop.com: Personally, I’m looking forward to seeing you in some more movies. I saw Belly 2 and I was a little confused about the plot. I wasn’t sure how it tied to Belly 1…Game: Yea, it didn’t. Originally it was called something else. And they sold it to Lionsgate, who out Belly 1. And then they just called it Belly 2 out of no where. And then I saw it. And people was like, yo, I saw you in Belly 2. I was like s**t, I’m in Belly 2? You know what I’m saying? But, it was just a real quick little hood flick that me and my dudes did and then we flipped it over and then we sold it. At that point, they can do whatever they want with it. And then they put it out. But we was watching it the other day on the bus and we was just laughing and thought it was cool. It was just a cool little hood flick. Like one of those BET movies. So it was cool.AllHipHop.com: Some of Hip Hop’s elite have all faced or are currently facing issues within our legal system. Game: I’m done (with the legal system).AllHipHop.com: Wayne, Gucci, T.I., etc. What keeps The Game out of jail?Game: S**t, just probation. I got about 5 more months on my probation so after that, try me if you want. But for now, I’m just walking a straight line. AllHipHop.com: What are your thoughts on the Illuminati? Game: Who the f**k are the people saying it. The Illuminati? Who they f**k are they just some bored a** people mad at they job and mad cause Rihanna getting it poppin’. Doing her rude boy s**t. And Jay man, Jay is a mason, man just, who gives a f###? That’s just one person’s opinion on they computer. You know these lap-tops and stuff give people the power to…AllHipHop.com: Do stuff…Game: No, cause you could be on there and you could be anybody because nobody knows what you look like, nobody knows anything about what you look like, it’s just words. And so you have the power to do and say what you want. But then you have to go back to your life and be as pitiful as you are. So man, f**k them people. AllHipHop.com: When you first came out, it was you, 50, Em, Dre. How difficult is it to remain friends [given the whole 50 situation]? For example, I can talk to this person but I can’t talk to that person…Game: I think at this point, I feel like you can talk to Dre and not talk to nobody else because Dre’s the man and whatever message you wanna get across you just send it through Dre and he’ll analyze it. And if it’s important enough, he’ll make that happen. He has the power to do so. But I’m not lost without those entities but of course it would have been a bigger picture if we would have just, you know, did the right thing. But I can’t look back and regret that because it happened and I can’t change it. Maybe one day we will have a rebirth of that situation. But until then I’m just coasting. AllHipHop.com: A lot of people see you working with Ashanti and have raised a lot of questions and/or started a lot of rumors. Is there a conspiracy against 50?Game: I can only speak for myself. But um, I met Ashanti and she’s pretty cool and I don’t have no problems with her. Nobody should have a problem with her. She’s not one of those guys, she’s a girl.AllHipHop.com: Lastly, can you kick a little rap or free-style?Game: I can’t free-style. I ain’t never free-styled in my life. But you know what free-styles is? Free-style is just somebody running over a bunch of words. I like to think cause I don’t want anything to come out my mouth that I’ll regret. That’s what free-styling is, you just throwing words out. You might say some s**t that you don’t necessarily mean.

Hip-Hop Rumors: Jay-Z & Em JUST Performed! Why Joe Budden Is AWOL! Slim Thug Finds A Friend!

DISCLAIMER:

 

All content within this section is pure rumor and generally have no factual info outside of what the streets have whispered in our ear. Read on.

Send your rumors, sightings and ill pics to illseed at al*************@***il.com.

LIL KIM AND NICKI MINAJ HAS A SONG?What’s up with this?

JAY-Z AND EMINEM JUST PERFORRRRRMEEED!

LMAO! Jay and them got us all good! They cancelled the rooftop performance, because it got out, but it didn’t really get cancelled…they fronted. It just happened. I don’t have details, but…’tis true.

DAMN AMALGAM DIGITAL!

I curse thee Amalgam Digital! Have you heard the new song with Eminem and Slaughterhouse? If not, peep this:

Eminem ft. Slaughterhouse – Session One (p###. Just Blaze) | Mediafire

Here is the rumor, as if you didn’t already know. I was informed that Budden and Amalgam was working out their issues. Well, it seems that they didn’t. I am hearing that Joe wasn’t permitted to be on this official release, because it is on the extended version of Eminem’s new album. Doh! Hopefully, Joe makes a remix version that will make the Slaughterhouse whole. I wonder how D-12 feels. Hmmm…no beef, just a thought.

TAYE DIGGS DEFENDS SLIM THUG

Hmmmm…how did Slim Thug and Taye Diggs find common ground? Weird.

“You know… I understand,” Diggs says. “It’s a situation that’s unfortunate, but at the same time, being a black man, I understand. I understand the idea of having something that you call your own, and how it could feel when a member of your clan, so to speak, chooses to be with someone from another clan. I get how that could make someone feel rejected.

    “But that being said, I can’t tolerate that because it’s 2010 and I don’t have time for that. When I was younger I did get caught up with that. When I was growing up, there were guys who dated everybody, there were guys that only dated black girls, and there were guys who only dated white girls. Back then, I used to judge the black guys that only dated white girls and for so long, I wanted people to know, I’m not one of those guys.

Source: HelloBeautiful

 

MASE GOT EVE OFF THE STRIPPER POLE

I missed this last week, but its still worth a mention. Mase is a good dude. Here is how Eve explains what happened, via Contact Music.

“He came into the club and looked at me and literally was like, ‘What’s your name?’ And I gave him every stripper name under the sun! I was like, ‘I’m Ginger, I’m Sassy!’ He was like, ‘Why don’t you go get dressed, let’s go just talk.’ And we did, we talked throughout the night. He was like, ‘You’re really talented. What are you doing? You know you’re not supposed to be here. You know it.’

“It was a confirmation for me that all these thoughts, all this sadness. All these times that I wake up in the morning, I’m like, ‘Why do I feel like this?’ And I know I’m not supposed to be there. It just woke me up.”

DON’T DO IT DREAMSTER! CHEATING ON CHRISTINA MILLIE?

Scoop this off H.B. too.

We have yet to see The Dream out and about with his new wife Christina Milian since she gave birth to his daughter Violet.  But, we HAVE  seen him with a few ladies at the club.The producer was recently spotted with yet another chick who is NOT Christina!!! The Dream has spoken out in recent interviews that his marriage is intact, so why haven’t we seen them out and about??

I hope Christina Milian doesn’t record an album of diss records. But seriously Dream says he’s not out swinging outside of his marriage. Those girls far friends. And he’s working. And C. Millie is in LA. Uh Huh.

 

ILLSEED’S QUCKIES

Lil Wayne’s daughter is forbidden from seeing him in Rikers.

The evil media is reporting all the wrong info regarding Boosie, as I have been told. Some of my sources down there are about to hit me with some new info.

Rumor has it, Ciara’s CD is not coming out. Man, they did everything, including KFC to get that think to come out! Actually, that was last year…but, you get the point.

NEW DRAKE SONGS!

Look what I found over at thisis50! One of these songs I heard before.

Drake – You Know You Know

Drake – Still Got It:

 

Drake – Greatness:

Download:

 

Drake – Greatness Thanks to Thisis50.com

Drake – You Know You Know

Drake – Still Got It

WHO IS THIS GUY?

Al B. Sure had it poppin’ back in the 80’s and 90’s. He was one of the leaders of the light-skinned domination. Now…not so much. Still, he is on Omarosa’s new reality show with Donald Trump – unibrow and all.

Here’s his No. 1 hit, “Nite and Day.”

 

EPIC WIN OF THE DAY!

Ron Artest…this song is bumpin! HAHAHAAH! Ron has come a long way as a rapper. Lakers…I’m not a fan, but I can’t even hate.

LADY GAGA AND HER BUMP

LMAO! By the way, she has been banned from Yankee Stadium for her presumed drunken tear.

 

 This chick is ethering everybody from Kelis to Xtina Aggy. M.I.A. needs to just say in her original lane and live happily ever after.

 NICKI AND SEAN

 I know you have a crush, Sean. Stop it. Seriously, they shot a video in Jamaica over the weekend or something recent.

 

Some have speculated that Nicki’s outfit is supposed to be a bee and therefore a slick dis to Lil Kim. I don’t know.

 

NICKI’S NEW COVER

Rumor has it Nicki won’t do an interview without being on the cover! But the covers are nice. I need to start a magazine.

 

SOULJA BOY’S NEW VIDEO

Here are a few pics from “Pretty Boy Swag.” You know, I’m tired of cats saying they “pretty.” WTF. Next thing, they will be calling themselves “lesbians” in their raps. Oh. Wait. They already do that.

 

 

GET ACTIVE!

RSVP AND PAY IN ADVANCE at http://www.actblue.com/page/kp4chollywood

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THE WORD “ILL”, WE LOVE YOU!!!

They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!

-illseed

WHO: illseed.com

WHAT: Rumors

WHERE: AllHipHop.com, MySpace.com/TheIllseed

HOW: Send your rumors and ill pics to illseed at al*************@***il.com.

Video: J. Cole: “Who Dat”

J. Cole debuted his new video for “Who Dat” today on BET’s “106 & Park” and the mini-movie is impressive. Slightly reminiscent of Xzibit’s “What U See Is What U Get,” but wholly original in today’s context. Check it out below.

Rap Star Fabolous Rings NASDAQ Opening Bell

(AllHipHop News) Brooklyn, rap star Fabolous has been named National Music Ambassador of the After-School All-Stars non-profit, which was founded former actor and current Governor of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger. Fabolous teamed with the 2010 After-School All-Stars Benefit this morning and rang the NASDAQ stock market’s opening bell. The rapper joins NBA stars LeBron James and Kobe Bryant as celebrity ambassadors for After-Scholl All-Stars, which Schwarzenegger founded in 1992. Fab rang the NASDAQ bell along side After-School All-Stars CEO Ben Paul and Chairman Paul Wachter. Earlier this week, Fabolous attended a benefit for After-School All-Stars at a swanky bash inside the Mandarin Hotel last week in Manhattan. The benefit featured guests like Governor Schwarzenegger, Francois-Henry Bennahmias, the President and CEO of Audemars Piguet watches, and Grammy Award Winning & Oscar nominated songwriter Siedah Garrett.

Police Question Fat Joe, Entourage Over Sexual Assault In Madison, WI

(AllHipHop News) Madison, Wisconsin police are investigating the claims of a local, 33-year-old woman, who claimed she was sexually assaulted by the rapper inside of his Cadillac limousine after a performance last night (June 20th). The unidentified woman called the police around 12:46 AM (June 21st), shortly after a concert at The Orpheum Theater featuring Fat Joe, born Joe Cartagena. Police said the concert started at 7:00 PM on June 20th. After the concert was over, the woman was inside of the Cadillac limo with Fat Joe and his entourage with the destination being a hotel on Madison’s West side. After “some time had elapsed,“ there were allegations of inappropriate touching “involving the female,” who reported the incident to police, according to prosecuting officer, Howard Payne. “This investigation is ongoing. Details are continuing to be developed in this matter,” said Officer Payne.  “Cartagena was questioned along with others in his entourage. Detectives briefly detained subjects involved in this matter, and released parties after interviews were completed.”