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JoJo Simmons’ Arrest Chronicled on Next ‘Run’s House’

Rather than keep the issue a private, family matter, Reverend Run will address the drug arrest of his son Joseph “JoJo” Simmons on an upcoming episode of  Run’s House.

 

On May 8, JoJo was arrested after buying marijuana in Washington Heights.

 

Along with criminal possession charges, the 19 year old teen was slapped with reckless endangerment for crashing his BMW into a parked car in an attempt to flee.

 

The episode shows Russell Simmons reminding his now reverend brother on his own past before being quick to condemn his young son.

 

“I’m not putting too much weight on him. I don’t know what he thought,” Reverend Run Stated. “I’m a reverend….I want him not to do it [smoke marijuana]. I wouldn’t like him to smoke it ever again. I’m a reverend, I can’t live off that.”

 

While sympathetic, Run’s mogul brother reminded him to keep his own checkered, pre-ministry past in perspective when disciplining JoJo.

 

“It’s not about you,” Russell Simmons countered. “You were in chimney when you were his age. You smoked up the whole house!”

 

“Well put it this way,” Run responded. “I did smoke weed, but that’s not the point. I’m hoping we can say something to him so that he won’t continue to get a rap sheet. Because if he ever does something again, they don’t just slap him on the wrist.”

 

JoJo Simmons also takes center stage to address his younger brother Russy and Diggy on the ramifications of his recent choices.

 

“My bad for not being around, and the stress I put everybody through,” JoJo told his younger siblings. “It was a careless mistake for me. Jail is no fun. When I was in a cell, I was thinking I’d trade anything in the world to come chill with y’all…Don’t let anyone pressure you into anything. Don’t make the same mistake that I made. See my mistake as y’all mistake, because that could’ve been y’all when y’all get older…Just remember what happened to JoJo, remember how mad he got Daddy and how much pain he put the family through. Stay focused.”

 

The Run’s House episode will air on MTV this Monday (June 22) at 10PM.

A Message to Hip Hop: We Need to Do More than Just Wear Green

Here’s a message to the Iranian Youth…Hip Hop is with you. We understand that what is going on in Iran is not about what America wants. We understand that this is not about the dictates of those who have a particular foreign policy agenda to push that at the end of the day may be calling for Iran to be destabilized.

Hip Hop is with you above and beyond a rap song, a dope video or meaningless swagger. Hip Hop is with you beyond a slogan or a shout out. Hip Hop is with you beyond the ignorance of some of our artists who wanna brag about having ‘Arab Money’.  Hip Hop is with you by honoring the 5th Element-Knowledge. Hip Hop is with you in solidarity and hoping to uplift our collective humanity.

We understand that what we’re seeing in Iran is a student movement, a women’s movement and other reform movements that have been simmering in Iran for some time. We can trace some of this back to 1999 when we here in the US were watching our own Presidential elections between George Bush and Al Gore which was tossed into dissarray  while students in Tehran University were out in the streets of Iran getting killed and student organizers were being snatched off the streets never to be seen again.  A few years ago I met students who had been jailed and beaten up by the Iranian government for protesting. They had a lot of heart. They were at a conference on censorship in Beirut in spite of knowing that their speaking out could get them serious trouble again.

What were seeing our people who feel that there should be more personal freedoms, where women don’t have to cover up, be searched and beaten on the streets. What we’re seeing are folks who want to have more then just state run press.  Part of the fights that students were dealing with in ‘99 was the shutting down of a newspaper.  Most of us don’t even blink an eye when our own newspapers and radio stations are hijacked.  What we’re seeing don’t want to adhere to long standing traditions and they’re challenging long standing traditions which has been inspired by the Western education and understanding that many have received outside the country and from understanding the world is much smaller place.

Before CNN started talking about Iran, many of us ignored or didn’t even know about the student & woman’s movements in Iran. We spent more time focused on the drama between 50 Cent & Rick Ross.From this day forward we’ve got to do better…

Sadly most of us never pay attention to foreign affairs unless it shows up on CNN.  Hence when there were no lights cameras and action and Iranians were demanding certain changes most of us were concerning ourselves with 50 Cent vs. Rick Ross. Most of us were talking about Chris Brown vs. Rihanna. Do folks know any of the movement leaders?  Do we know the name of any of the student organizations?  Do any of know about the jail time that many have endured to speak out? Is this really about them backing the opposition candidate Mir Hussein Moussavi or is about stepping to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei? How many of us know the role the president plays in relationship between the Supreme leader?

Let’s use this opportunity to embrace Hip Hop’s 5th element and do the knowledge.  Part of that knowledge means for us to start listening closely and resist framing the story so it fits our own limited parameters. When we say things like most of the people marching are middle-class what exactly does that mean? Is it the same thing as middle class here in the US? Are the people marching Muslim or Christian? Are they westernized or traditional? Is Iran a modernized country or does it fall into a stereotype where it’s underdeveloped with folks riding camels through a desert?  Folks better think again and note that in many regards we here in the US may actually be behind.

I said this in my last essay-Are the Protests in Iran Real or a CIA backed Exercise? this is much bigger than the two leaders. They happen to be stepping stones and stops along the way to something much larger and much more deeply felt.  How about this folks… if we’re gonna wear Green in solidarity with the Iranian people and their struggle, how about stepping our personal game up? If we’re gonna wear Green and say we want change how about committing ourselves to stay up on foreign news long after CNN stops covering this? How about making Iran, Darfur, Congo and Haiti which just experienced a horrific blood bath two days ago between funeral marchers and UN Peacekeepers, be a topics we tweet about and comment on via Facebook? Can we make a promise amongst ourselves to educate ourselves each day on a variety of foreign issues?

If we can’t do this at the very least take down our Green avatars and stop bullshitting ourselves and disrespecting the people who are out on those streets not just in Iran but all over the world really risking getting their heads cracked. There’s no excuse for Iranian people to know more about President Obama’s policies then we do and they live in Iran. If we’re gonna wear Green, let’s not do this part time. Let’s not be casual trendy observers. This struggle in Iran is not going to be over and neatly wrap up at a particular time and date like a television show. It’s gonna be on going. 

If we’re gonna wear Green to show solidarity, how about taking it a step further & educating ourselves on US Foreign policy-For example, what’s the real motivation behind Senator John McCain and the GOP in condemning Iranian leaders? Is it really to support the student & women’s movement or to merely use them?

If we want change in Iran let that change be right here at home. If we want to wear Green lets take a closer look at the rhetoric being pushed by our Republican minority in the Senate and in Congress.  President Obama is taking a measured tone saying let’s not become the topic at hand  be seen as meddlers while Senator John McCain and others are basically saying ‘F### that.. We gonna jump right on in there and start smashing because they have an agenda that they’re trying to push that has very little to do with the student movements’. The GOP will use those movements and temporary align themselves, but it’s not about making sure students a free from any oppression. Are they helping, hurting or leading us in another direction?It’s

cool to wear Green in solidarity but ideally we should show solidarity

by being as bold as those students on the streets by fearlessly

challenging and asking our own government some hard questions

especially around the issue of foreign policy

If we’re wearing Green, we need to be asking ourselves what’s’ up with our own government and its foreign policy-not just in Iran but throughout the entire Middle East. Maybe if more of us wearing Green committed ourselves to do the knowledge, Iran wouldn’t be in this predicament because we would be electing leaders who have a deeper, more holistic approach toward the Middle East -starting with us not green lighting everything Israel does. Yes, folks at the end of the day let’s deal with the 800 pound gorilla in the room much of what we are seeing is connected to US/ Israeli foreign policy…

That’s a few things to ponder…

 -Davey D-

PS..As I’m writing this I’m watching TV and noting that the big networks are claiming they can’t cover the events in Tehran because of a news media blackout imposed by the Iranian government…Its  kind of funny hearing this, because  we seem to always have our own  media blackout here in the US. Of course those blackouts are  imposed by the news directors and owners of these big networks-but let’s not digress.  My question is what happened to all those expensive spy satellites that are supposed to be able to see the head of pin from thousands of miles away? What’s up with Google Earth? There’s no excuse for us not to be able to see whats going on? Why aren’t we using all this technology we brag about having?

 

 

 

 

 

  Below is a video that my homie Paradise of X-Clan tunred me onto it’s by Weapons X

 

Wendy Day and Kim Ellis: Helping You Get “In The Know”

Knowledge is power, and in the music industry especially, a large percentage of artists attain their knowledge through trial and error. Though that route is an unfortunate reality for most, the independent artist with little to no budget can’t afford to make too many costly mistakes. The margin for error could cost them their career. Two ladies who have learned their own hard lessons in the industry, have made it their business to give back to the industry by helping artists, and those seeking a career in entertainment how to do it the right way. Wendy Day and Kim Ellis are the creators of “In The Know” webinars. The monthly series of educational webinars feature some of the best and the brightest in the entertainment business, who volunteer their time to help those who are serious about having a career in music, avoid the rookie mistakes that can cost a lot of time and money.

Wendy Day, as the founder of Rap Coalition, a non profit organization that acts as an artists’ advocacy group dedicated to the support, education, protection, and unification of hip hop artists, similar to a union. Kim Ellis is the Editor of Street Report Magazine with a background in Public Relations. Collectively the ladies have over 20 years of music industry information to share and they want to help everyone get in the know.

AllHipHop.com: Hi ladies, let’s first start of by telling those who aren’t familiar with your work, a little about your backgrounds.

Kim: I basically stumbled into the industry, it wasn’t something I pursued it kind of happened accidentally. I started in artist management and without contacts that grew old very quickly. I switched up my direction and began working with a couple of magazines and some promotions companies for a little while before I realized that I could have my own company and offer these services to many versus limiting myself to one particular company and hence, KE Consulting & Marketing Solutions was birthed in 2006. There, I worked with many on their marketing and PR campaigns to assist in garnering more exposure. Once I lost the passion for it, I decided it was time to either go back to Corporate America or change my course and In The Know Seminars was my first step in a different direction. Now, I do these webinars monthly with Wendy Day and I am also the Editor-in-Chief of Street Report Magazine, who I have been working with in equally amount of time. I’ve been given a new zest of life so to speak with these two ventures.

Wendy: I started a company called Rap Coalition in 1992 because I grew frustrated of hearing stories of my favorite rappers getting jerked by their label, and managers and these other companies and it really put me off that no one was helping them, so I wanted to help the independent artists learn how to evolve and helping them launch their cancer so I started the non-profit to help artists.

AllHipHop.com: How are you able to provide for free what most people charge good money in consulting fees for?

Wendy: I had a career in Marketing in corporate America and I had taken about half a million dollars of my savings and started Rap Coalition.

AllHipHop.com: that’s a perfect segue into the sentiment behind the In The Know Seminars, making information available to the masses what made you guys want to do this together?

Wendy: I’m going to let Kim address that because this is really her baby but I just want to preface that by saying this industry is a really closed circle of individuals and if you don’t have knowledge access and/or resources, its not going to be easy for you at all.

Kim: As far as the concept behind In The Know webinars go, with the way the economy has been since last Summer it just really hit me that people really don’t have the budgets to travel and go to the more reputable conferences. Case and point I’ve gone to a number of them as I’m sure Wendy has gone to hundreds of them and in the course of a weekend I’ve easily spent $1500 between travel, registration and hotel and back when I was so thirsty for knowledge going to a two day conference was almost like information overload. I’d walk away like what the hell was that about? I couldn’t keep it all in my head, so I began to figure it probably makes more sense to make it a more topic specific event once a month so that those who are learning can actually absorb the information and retain it a lilt more vs. all the distractions that come with a live seminar.

AllHipHop.com: I would have to agree that’s what made me a fan of In The Know webinars. Information overload can be a big problem although I recently attended the One Stop Shop Producers conference and I must say that was one of the best conferences I’ve been to in a long time and I think it was because it was specifically focused on the producers.

Wendy: Sha Money’s seminar is actually the best one we have in Urban music and I think its because he’s so well connected and he keeps it so specific to production that he really just focused on one thing and he’s really good at it.

AllHipHop.com: What are the next up coming webinars?

Wendy: we just did “Building a Career in Music” where we had artists like Mistah Fab, 40 Glocc, and Young Buck discuss being at different stages in their careers the next one is going to be “What the DJ’s Think” that should be a big one. The DJ’s will be talking about what they look for in music, why they play what they play, how they make money outside of spinning etc. That for people trying to get their records played by a DJ and then that one is going to lead to the July webinar which is “How to Get Radio Play”. There we’re going to discuss how somebody can get their record on the air, its inevitable that whenever I’ve done these DJ panels in that past that’s always the #1 question. After that in August, we’re going to talk about how to get a record deal, people are still asking how to get a record deal so we’re going to address that and these are all the 3rd Saturday of each month.

AllHipHop.com: How do you feel about these artists still seeking label deals?

Wendy: I’ve always recommended people stay indie, because I’ve seen the financial realities of signing to a record label and in this economy I’m even more pro indie than I’ve ever been. I just don’t see a need for a record label other than financial, so if you’re an artist and you don’t have the money to put out a record yourself or you don’t have the ability to go find an investor or a partner or a sponsor/endorsement or simply someone who is going to back you financially, then you almost have to sign to a label, but labels are the most ineffective they’ve ever been in the history of my career of over 18 years.

AllHipHop.com: Is it possible for artists to do it for themselves on line if they don’t have a label deal and still compete with a major label presence?

Wendy: Absolutely. There’s a company called tunecore.com, and I don’t mean to promote them because I don’t work for them, but they’ve been great for all the artists that I consult and they actually pay and they’re inexpensive to get down with, and they pass along 100% of the download money to the artist. It’s such a wonderful digital distribution system but for as much as everything is going to the internet you cant not have traditional distribution. Digital distribution in Hip-hop is still only roughly 15-25% of our sales so if you strictly go digital your cutting out a huge chunk of sales, you could be making as an artist.

AllHipHop.com: At the end of the day, what do you want people to walk away with from the seminars.

Wendy: Nobody can walk away from a two-hour webinar and know everything there is to know but I want people to walk away with enough knowledge to learn the action and make positive use of it.

Kim: I want them to look at us as a resource to gain reputable and necessary knowledge.

Common, Queen Latifah Find Love In ‘Just Wright’

Rappers/actors Common and Queen Latifah have signed on to star in a new Fox Searchlight film titled Just Wright.

 

Queen Latifah plays a sports trainer, who falls in love with a professional basketball player, while attempting to rehabilitate him from a career-threatening injury.

 

The script was written by Michael Elliot, while Latifah, long time partner Shakim Compere and Debra Martin Chase will produce the movie, with Sanaa Hamri directing.

 

Common, who is currently shooting Date Night, recently had a high profile role in the movie Terminator Salvation, which has raked in over $165 million dollars in box office revenue in the U.S. since being released in May.

 

Shooting on Just Wright is slated to begin next month, while the movie is expected to be in theaters nationwide sometime in 2010.

Plies Drops ‘Goon Affiliated’; Second Album In Six Months

Less than two years after the release of his RIAA-certified gold debut The Real Testament, Florida rapper Plies is preparing for the release of his fourth studio album, Goon Affiliated.

 

The album, set for a September 2009 release, will mark another milestone in Plies’ career.

 

It will be his first album to feature collaborations with rappers, as opposed to singers.

 

Of course, his three previous releases have featured impressive A-List R&B guest appearances.

 

The Real Testament’s success was powered by the T-Pain assisted “Shawty,” as well as “Hypnotized,” featuring Akon.

 

On his sophomore effort, Definition of Real, Plies scored a hit with “Bust It Baby pt. 2” featuring Ne-Yo, which would become the Ft. Myers, Florida native’s first single to hit #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

 

On his third album, Da Realist, Plies sought the support of Ashanti, singer/songwriter Sean Garrett, and newcomer Chris J, who lent his voice to the album’s debut single “Put It On Ya.”

 

“I’ve been blessed to be able to come back with three albums in 16 months,” said the Big Gates/Slip-n-Slide/Atlantic recording artist of his success. “I feel like it’s something that hadn’t been done in the new era.”

 

On his next album, Plies is promising new sounds, new technology and a new batch of hand-picked top notch producers.

 

And he has already departed from his traditional formula by presenting his first feature-free single.

 

“Becky,” the first official single from Goon Affiliated makes its debut today (June 19).

 

As to the topic of the song, fans will have to hear it to figure it out.

 

Plies does offer one hint, however: “Some of you all will be mad at me for saying this,” he offers, “but I’m in love with Becky!”

 

The rapper most recently made a return to the forefront with the radio single “Plenty Money,” which is currently in heavy rotation across the Southeast.