Master P reveals his classy artwork for the new mixtape Famous Again. Master P has a habit of reaching a younger audience and fan base by his viral, internet campaign as the multi-platinum artist reintroduces his self to this generation. After the highly successful Al Capone mixtape, P has now made a new street banger “I Need An Armored Truck” featuring his son Rome which is the lead off single to his new mixtape Famous Again which drops August 6th of 2013.
A few weeks ago some people (myself included) were led to believe that Civil Rights Icon, Freedom Fighter, Revolutionary and ex-President of South Africa, Nelson Mandela was knocking on death’s door. I was bracing myself for the sad news that another great leader had left us. Mandela fought against a brutal and tyrannical form of institutionalized, rationalized, legalized, and codified form of racism called Apartheid. This particular form of oppression had been used to allow the white minority to rule over the native black population in South Africa. And while some believe that somehow with the election of Black President and a call for healing from Mandela himself that South Africa redeemed herself as a nation. I’m sure the average black South African would disagree with you.
Here in America there has been this attempt to erase our muddled history, distort the harsh realities of our present all the while lamenting the grim prospects of our future. Despite the civil rights movement, despite the black power movement, despite the election of our nation’s first black President. Our great nation has not come to terms with the fact that she is a racist. She doesn’t look at her black sons and daughters and see them as her own children. She looks as confused as a mother hen who suddenly finds herself atop a hatched goose egg.
How can I call a whole country racist you ask? Well you see what I’m doing is taking an old racist routine known as the one drop rule. The one drop rule was the rule stating if you had one drop of black blood in you, you were black. My one drop rule is if you let just one racist influence the consciousness of a nation then that nation is racist. There are nations with worse identity politics and more brutal discrimination than our nation. But there aren’t many whose very legacy is stained with the blood of slaves. There aren’t many who have so thoroughly exploited, demeaned, degraded, and eroded the very personhood of an entire demographic of their citizens.
Blacks in America are in the same boat as blacks in South Africa, we are in worse shape than the Kurds in Iraq, we are on par with the Palestinians in the West Bank and the Gaza strip. But the difference between us and those people is the fact that those people aren’t being lied to and told that they are crazy for feeling like they are under siege. And if your teenage son can’t go to the store without fear of being shot than you are under siege make no mistake about it.
I can’t take the trial of George Zimmerman as a new lesson. Rather it is a reinforcement of what I already know. That while America has been patting herself on the back for all the progress it has made it still looks at non-white people as lesser. Stereotypes and Bias against Trayvon were more important than the fact that he did nothing. The whole trial was focused on George Zimmerman’s right to “defend himself” against someone who did nothing to threaten him. I don’t think anything was said about Trayvon’s right to defend himself against a strange man that was following HIM!!!
You have undoubtedly heard this a million times already but it doesn’t make it any less true: if Trayvon Martin had shot George Zimmerman his life would be over by now. He would have been another 17 year old tried as an adult and sentenced to life in prison. Never forget that the fact that a black man is only three-fifths of a man is something that had to be corrected. Our country was founded on that principle. And to assuage the spectre of white guilt a national blame the victim campaign was launched in the late 70’s to further dehumanize us. After all slavery was a long time ago we should all have our s### together. And why was Trayvon wearing a hoodie anyway? and did you hear the way Rachel talked on the stand her testimony is totally discredited because she “copped an attitude”. Also the irrelevant facts that Trayvon had marijuana in his system and had once been suspended from school are actually relevant cuz it just proves that he was a suspicious “other” who may have been up to no good and George Zimmerman was right to stalk him.
This is the America we live in. Barack Obama may be the President but Trayvon Martin isn’t even a human being. Your son, your brother, your cousin may not make it through the night. Not because he is a bad person, not because he is up to no good, but because our society has taught and constantly reinforced the lesson that black is dangerous. black is scary. black is bad. I dread the day when I have to tell my nephew to keep his eyes low and speak meekly when confronted because his life isn’t guaranteed. He is not given equal protection and priority under the law. He is the natural enemy of “mainstream” America. For no other reason than that he is young, male, and black.
I have a very selfish reason for wanting this Zimmerman case to go away. It is because it drains the life out of me. It depresses me. It kills my spirit and my soul. It hurts my heart, my head and my stomach. It almost makes me physically ill. To be subjected to these harsh living conditions is one thing. Because we live in a country where you can mostly get used to racial injustice. You pretty much have to. Speak too loudly about it, as a black man, and you are pretty much unemployable. So we middle-class/educated Blacks make this Faustian deal with the devil. We will sell you our collective souls and we’ll at least shut up if not turn a blind eye to all the foolishness.
It can be hard to cull anything positive from a tragedy. We talk about making ourselves aware. We talk about arming ourselves with knowledge. But who exactly is aware and who exactly is knowledgeable? I just got done reading a piece in Time Magazine that says only 16% of White Americans feel like there is a lot of discrimination in the U.S. today. The greater culture continues to view the Civil Rights movement as successful. This revisionist history has affected every aspect of our culture. In that very same Time Magazine respected political writer Joe Klein expresses another delusional belief that “our children” will be color blind. That’s the same thing liberal idiots said in the 60’s and guess what their children are serving on that Zimmerman Jury and their color blindness is predictably selective. They don’t see race as a motivating factor but they can with a straight face say that they don’t know who started the fight between Zimmerman and Martin.
The harassment of our people has been legalized. Our perpetual status as second class citizens has been codified. There is nothing more debasing and degrading than being confronted by law enforcement anywhere in this country and instantly following the same script a freed black man had to follow when confronted by law enforcement in 1865. Don’t look them directly in the eye. Speak in soft tones. Comply with them regardless of how unreasonable, hateful or racist they are towards you. The cost of living is putting aside your pride. Black men are asked to accept this as a natural fact of life. Our very existence is somehow threatening. Once as a 15 year old I was threatened with a police call because I raised my voice to a vice principal. As blacks we are not allowed to be imperfect teenagers. We are not allowed to be angry. Because we have been reduced to stereotypes. Anything we say or do only reinforces those stereotypes. So it doesn’t matter if Trayvon Martin was doing nothing. A Jury found that Zimmerman has the right to confront him and ask for his papers. This is our life. America is South Africa.
But what we can’t do is let this one go like we let Sean Bell go, like we let Amadou Diallo go, like we let Rodney King, we have to stay angry. We have to stay indignant. We have to let outrage at our treatment become the new standard. We need instituional racism to become as taboo as over racism. Keep it with you. Keep Trayvon in your heart and your mind when you step to a ballot box. Remember the fact that in 2013 you have to tell a whole group of young people that you are perceived as a threat in your own country just because of your skin color. And don’t stop until one day that conversation doesn’t have to happen.
E. Knight lives in Philadelphia. Check out his blog boxingwithgod.com. Read more of his AHH Blogs HERE.
If you would like to write for AHH here’s how.
Still reeling from the Zimmerman verdict, many artists have expressed their frustration and anger via tribute songs. AHH has collected some here from Beyoncé, Young Jeezy to Jasiri X, people do not want Trayvon’s life to be forgotten.
[ALSO READ: Trayvon Martin’s Parents Make First Interviews Since Not Guilty Verdict (VIDEO)]
“Skittles And Iced Tea” – GhostWridah
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“We Are Trayvon” – Plies , P###. by Filthy Beatz
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“It’s A Cold World” – Young Jeezy
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“Stand Your Ground” – Pharoahe Monch
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“Trigger Man” – Raheem Devaughn
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“Hoodiez” – Willie D ft. Scarface, Propain, D Boi
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“Justice (If You re 17)” – Wyclef Jean
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“TrayVon Martin Tribute” – Chaka Khan
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“GUN” – PlanetVI
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“Beyond Trayvon” – Public Enemy
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“Neighborhood Watch” – Sneakas ft. Bishop Lamont
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“Before He Walked” – Talib Kweli, Nelly & Abby Dobson
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Trayvon Martin Tribute – Papoose
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“I Am Trayvon Martin” – Bizzy Crook
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“Put Your Hoodies On (4 Trayvon)” – Steel Pulse
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“Let me Live (Trayvon Martin Tribute)” – Young Thug
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“Trayvon” – Jasiri X
“I Will Always Love You” – Beyoncé
(AllHipHop News) Less than a week after George Zimmerman was found not guilty over the death of 17 year old Trayvon Martin, his parents make their first televised interviews since the verdict.
Speaking with both CBS This Morning and ABC’s Good Morning America, Sybrina Fulton and Tracy Martin discuss the racial component to the case, their shock and more.
With CBS This Morning, Sybrina reveals that the parents were not privy to all of the details of the case and discovered some key information during the trial such as George Zimmerman’s history of 911 calls.
They also call for President Obama to “at least” give a detailed investigation of this case.
Check out both interviews below:

It seems like every single time I look up, NYC is being destroyed in the movies. Why not Chicago or LA or maybe Wilmington, Delaware. But, nobody gets the privilege of being destroyed like NY. I remember this:

And this:

But, if you were there, who could forget this, where the whole city was leveled:


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Looks like Busta Rhymes is coming back with a reprise of his classic 1998 album E.L.E. (Extinction Level Event): The Final World Front. That album was crazy and happened the year AllHipHop was created. Wow. Now, word is Busta is going to take a crack at a sequel, E.L.E. 2 to get back to form. I wonder if it will come through the house of Cash Money? Speaking of sequels, I hear Redman is working on Muddy Waters 2 also. Well, well, well….

They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry! -illseed.
Illseed, Out.
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(AllHipHop News) Tomorrow (July 20th) Peter Rosenberg will coalesce some of the biggest names in Hip Hop at Willamsburg Waterfront for his second annual birthday bash #PeterPalooza. But unless you live under a rock (or do not follow him on the internet) then you know Peter Rosenberg’s second biggest passion next to Hip Hop is his love for all things professional wrestling.
[ALSO CHECK OUT: EXCLUSIVE: Peter Rosenberg Talks About Upcoming Birthday Concert (Part 1) (VIDEO)]
In Part 2 of our interview, Peter speaks about not witnessing the infamous Mick Foley drop from the top of the Hell in a Cell at the WWE (WWF at the time) 1998 King of the Ring.
The geek comes out when we talk deeper and the HOT 97 personality reveals what he would ask the epochal Vince McMahon if he had the chance and the legacy of Andre The Giant.
Tickets to Peter Palooza are selling out quick but can be still be purchased at Ticketmaster. Performances from Odd Future, Meek Mill, World’s Fair, Schoolboy Q and potential surprises.
Check out Peter Rosenberg talk exclusively with AllHipHop below:
I Don’t Camouflage hung out with Shinobi Ninja, this time with the full band, to talk about their childhood, cultural background, misconception, extra curricular activities and more. Check out the secret behind Baby G’s style, how DJ Axis Power started body building and his family influences, message to the kids and more.
(AllHipHop Interview) Sometimes it only takes one year for a person’s life to change completely. That is definitely the case for 23-year-old producer Anderson “Vinylz” Hernandez. The Washington Heights, New York native has been making tracks since the age of 15, and around this time just 365 days ago he was still a mostly unknown beatmaker. Then Hip Hop artists, blogs, and fans began to take notice of Vinylz’s production skills when songs by rappers like Roscoe Dash (“Like Diz” featuring 2 Chainz) and Joe Budden (“NBA” featuring Wiz Khalifa and French Montana) starting making the rounds on the net and radio.
Fast forward just a few months later and now Vinlyz’s name is attached to some of the biggest Hip Hop songs of 2013. Armed with his FL Studios software and electronic keyboard Vinylz teamed with Matthew “Boi-1da” Samuels to create Drake’s “5AM In Toronto,” DJ Khaled’s “No New Friends,” and Jay Z’s “F*ckwithmeyouknowigotit.”
AllHipHop.com caught up with the rising beatmaker to get the scoop about some of the tracks he’s produced, how he hooked up with Boi-1da, and what the future holds.
AllHipHop.com: What was your reaction when you found out your beat made it on Jay Z’s album?
Vinylz: I was shocked. I didn’t believe it at first. [Bo-1da] text me like, “yo, we made Jay Z’s album. Thank me later.” I was like, “what? what?” I still didn’t believe it until my lawyer hit me up and said, “yeah, I think this is pretty real.”
“F*ckwithmeyouknowigotit” was originally a Rick Ross track. How did it end up on Magna Carta Holy Grail?
Basically, Rick Ross wanted Jay on a feature for his record, but I guess when Jay heard it he was like, “I need this for my album.” You know Ross is not going to say no to Jay.
Why did you decide to use that particular Pimp C vocal sample for the track?
Honestly, I thought it was real inspiring. He was just saying a bunch of dope stuff about the reason behind why he wears his gold chains. I like searching for interviews. It makes the song bigger, and it gives you direction of what you’re going to talk about on a song.
Because of Jay’s Samsung deal he was recognized with a platinum plaque already. Did you get one for your participation as well?
I was told I’m suppose to get one, so hopefully soon. I don’t think anyone’s got one besides him yet.
[ALSO READ: Jay-Z Gets His Platinum Plaque For Magna Carta Holy Grail]
How did you first connect with Boi-1da?
I’m really close to Boi-1da. I met him back in 2007. We were in Atlanta. Before that he hit me up on Myspace and was like, “I think you’re really dope.” We just happened to be in Atlanta at the same time. He was working with Drake, and I was working with Cassidy. I invited him to one of my sessions and from there we just played beats and cliqued.
You’re currently working with Boi-1da on Drake’s new album Nothing Was The Same. Can you give some insight into how that project is going?
It sounds amazing. Drake is always bringing something original to the table. That’s all I can say right now.
How did “No New Friends” come together?
Around Grammy week, Boi-1da was basically like, “I need to link up with you to work on this Drake album.” So me and my partner Allen Ritter flew out to L.A. and stayed at Drake’s house. We had a room there, just working, and Drake would come upstairs and listen to beats and tell us what he thought we should change. He said, “1da, I got this hook I want you to flip.” He said it was going to be the “Started From The Bottom” remix. Once we heard the hook we got to work on it. Later Drake heard it, and he was going crazy.
So the song started out potentially being a Drake remix?
Yeah, it was going to be Drake’s song at first. It was going to be the “Started From The Bottom” remix. He’s got a great relationship with Khaled, so he let Khaled have it. Drake got hits, so he passes off hits. He got those for days.
Are you currently producing any upcoming tracks for other artists?
I got a record with Future and Drake for Future’s album. I got some stuff with 2 Chainz. I got a record with Yo Gotti. I’m working with Sammy Adams. It’s a whole bunch of people I’m working with now.
Your profile has really blown up over the last year. Has that hit you when you’re sitting back and reflecting?
Definitely, it’s surreal. It’s crazy how everything has happened in like one year. I had some records out last year, but this year has been my biggest year. It’s an amazing feeling to just hear your records on the radio. I got like 4, 5, 6 records on the radio right now.
Do you have any interest in making a full album or mixtape?
Probably in the future. As of now I have two artists, one is an R&B artist and the other a Hip Hop artist. I’m focused on their projects right now. Allen Ritter is the R&B artist. He actually co-produces with me on a couple of tracks that are out there already. Jae B is a songwriter and artist as well. He’s dope. You will hear a lot from both of them this year.
Who are your favorite producers right now?
Boi-1da, T-Minus, Hit-Boy, Mike Will [Made It].
You have a lot of pictures of food on your Instagram. Do you consider yourself a “foodie?”
Definitely. I gotta stop though. I’m gaining too much weight. I’m having a lot of meetings lately. They always want to take you out, so I take advantage. We also celebrate a lot now. We’re always eating.
Where do you see yourself one year from now?
Hopefully, executive producing my artists’ albums. Trying to be better than this year.
Follow Vinylz on Twitter @VINYLZ and on Instagram @Vinylz.
[ALSO READ: Producer Selasi Discusses Everything from The Kandy Factory to Cancer]

I noticed early on that The Dream was working with Jay-Z on Magna Carta Holy Grail. But, there is something that I was informed of. The Dream was the original singer on “Holy Grail,” the song that now features Justin Timberlake. Now, that’s a big record and The Dream remains a co-producer and song writer on the song. He was just swapped out. There is a secret recording of this record, but I’m wondering why they didn’t stick with The Dream’s version. I was permitted to hear a snippet and its actually better than the original. Justin makes it a “big” record. Too bad my source wouldn’t let me have the song. They maintain its too whatever to actually give to me. Maybe the original is just a reference track for Justin T and a stepping stone so these dudes can tour more. Sooooo….there is no beef here, but I thought it was interesting.
They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry! -illseed.
Illseed, Out.
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(AllHipHop News) Yesterday (July 18) was the birthday of global icon Nelson Mandela. In celebration of the 95-year-old freedom fighter, former leader of the African National Congress, and first black South African president’s born day, The Weinstein Company production studio released the first trailer for the upcoming biographical film Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom starring Idris Elba.
The movie is directed by British filmmaker Justin Chadwick (The Other Boleyn Girl, The First Grader) and based on Mandela’s 1994 memoir Long Walk to Freedom. Naomie Harris plays Winnie Mandela and Robert Hobbs appears as Chief Warden.
[ALSO CHECK OUT: As Zimmerman Jury Goes to Deliberate, Fruitvale Station Hits Theaters]
Watch the trailer for Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom below.
(AllHipHop News) The Taylor Gang leader and the Chuck Taylor shoe maker are officially joining forces for a new line of sneakers. Wiz Khalifa Collection by Converse is set to hit Foot Locker stores on August 23. That will be the same month a sneak peek of Wiz’s custom caps by Flat Fitty will show at MAGIC Market Week in Las Vegas.
[ALSO READ: Wiz Khalifa Partners With Flat Fitty For New Luxury Headwear Line]
Wiz is currently on the “Under The Influence of Music Tour” with A$AP Rocky, B.O.B, and Joey Bada$$ & Pro Era. The Pittsburgh rapper is also prepping the release of his third studio album Blacc Hollywood set to drop later this year.
[ALSO READ: Wiz Khalifa Announces Title For Next Album & Drops New Video “Old Chanel”]
Check out the preview of Wiz Khalifa Collection by Converse in the video below.
TGI….Everyday! Welcome to the beginning of the rest of your life and the end of a wonderful week! We had our highs, we certainly had our lows, but we are here to see another day so all is good! Today’s Daily Word is dedicated to Creating your balance! Mark Twain once eloquently asked “What is joy without sorrow? What is success without failure? What is a win without a loss? What is health without illness? You have to experience each if you are to appreciate the other. There is always going to be suffering. It’s how you look at your suffering, how you deal with it, that will define you.” As we wrap up this wonderful week…. Keep that in mind! Your journey will have highs and lows, bumps and bruises, but despite that you should always keep your eyes on the prize! Being in a state of despair or hopelessness will never do you or your situation any good! Know and understand the cycles of life and allow your self to maintain focus during the times when everyone would understand if you gave up! As the big homie Shawn Carter once said… Sometimes you’re up… Sometimes you’re down, but as long as you stay the same it will come back around!! Create Your Balance! Life is for living so live it the best way you can!
“Life is mixture of sunshine and rain, teardrops and laughter, pleasure and pain. Just remember, there was never a cloud that the sun couldn’t shine through.”
-Unknown
“Be moderate in order to taste the joys of life in abundance.”
-Epicurus
“Life is a balanced system of learning and evolution. Whether pleasure or pain; every situation in your life serves a purpose. It is up to us to recognize what that purpose could be.”
-Steve Maraboli
“Success works as a cycle – growth and contraction, balancing and unbalancing – all while you’re encountering hurdles that get higher and higher over time.”
-Julien Smith
“There is no need to drag yourself through life. Let go of the struggle and give yourself the time and love to find balance.”
-Unknown
“Life is a balancing act. You need to keep your head up and your feet on the ground, while allowing your heart to go wherever it pleases!”
-Susan Gale
“You have to accept all sides of yourself – there’s no point fighting them – just learn how to handle them, and return to the positive, balanced being you know you can be, once the winds have blown through.”
-Jay Woodman
“Find your balance and stand with it. Find your song and sing it out. Find your cadence and let it appear like a dance. Find the questions that only you know how to ask and the answers that you are content to not know.”
-Mary Anne Radmacher
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Ash’Cash is a Business Consultant, Motivational Speaker, Financial Expert and the author of Mind Right, Money Right: 10 Laws of Financial Freedom. For more information, please visit his website, www.IamAshCash.com
TO HEAR THE AUDIO VERSION OF THE DAILY WORD **CLICK HERE
(AllHipHop News) Since the not guilty verdict in the George Zimmerman trial was announced last weekend, members of the Hip Hop community have expressed their frustration and heartache through tweets, tribute songs, and rallies. Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson was one of the performers to use Twitter to vent about the outcome, but The Roots drummer also extended his thoughts on the situation beyond 140 characters in an open letter posted on Facebook. The personal reflection touches on his reaction to the verdict and discrimination he has had to deal with throughout his life.
Read portions of Questlove’s open letter below.
I’m trying not to internalize these feelings about the Trayvon Martin case and make it about me — but hey, it is what it is, and maybe I’m melodramatic. All I’m consumed with is my positioning in life.
I often tell cute, self-deprecating celebrity run-in stories that end with my own “pie in the face” moment. But rarely do I share stories of a more serious nature, another genre of “pie in the face” moments, mostly because in the age of social media, most people are quick to dismiss my tales as #FirstWorldProblems. But I can’t tell you how many times a year I’m in a serious situation, only to hear the magic words “Oh, wait … Questlove?” Hey guys, it’s Questlove. “We’re so sorry, you can go!” Like, five to seven times a year, a night ending in the words “Thank God for that Afro or we’d never have recognized you” happens to me.
I’m in scenarios all the time in which primitive, exotic-looking me — six-foot-two, 300 pounds, uncivilized Afro, for starters — finds himself in places where people who look like me aren’t normally found. I mean, what can I do? I have to be somewhere on Earth, correct? In the beginning — let’s say 2002, when the gates of “Hey, Ahmir, would you like to come to [swanky elitist place]?” opened — I’d say “no,” mostly because it’s been hammered in my DNA to not “rock the boat,” which means not making “certain people” feel uncomfortable.
I mean, that is a crazy way to live. Seriously, imagine a life in which you think of other people’s safety and comfort first, before your own. You’re programmed and taught that from the gate. It’s like the opposite of entitlement.
The problem is, I do have desires to go to certain places and do certain things and enjoy the perks and benefits of being a person who works his a### off as much as I do. So I got over my hang-ups of not wanting to be the odd guy in the room sometime around 2007. It’s been mixed results at best. Some of it is “Oh, that wasn’t that bad”; some of it is “Well, that was awkward … ” This is the prime reason I hate vacations. I don’t feel like being the “odd guy out” at vacation spots, hence the reason my 2009 hobo journey train trip was my best vacation ever. There’s no scaring people on a train ride. My friends know that I hate parking lots and elevators, not because they are places that danger could occur, but it’s a prime place in which someone of my physical size can be seen as a dangerous element. I wait and wait in cars until I feel it’s safe for me to make people feel safe. I know most of y’all are eye-rolling, but if you spent a good three months in these size fourteens, you’d understand why I take that position.
I recently told a friend one of these stories: I live in a “nice” building. I work hard. You know I work hard. My logic is (naïve alert in 5, 4, 3, 2 … ) “Well, there can’t be any fear of any type in this building” — you’ve got to go through hell and high water just to get accepted to live here, like it’s Dartmouth or UPenn. Secondly, there are, like, five to eight guards on duty 24/7, so this spot is beyond safe. Like, Oscar winners and kids of royalty and sports guys and mafia goombahs live here. One night, I get in the elevator, and just as the door closes this beautiful woman gets on. Because of a pain in the a### card device you have to use to get to your floor, it just makes it an easier protocol for whoever is pressing floors to take everyone’s request, like when you are at the window of a drive-thru. So I press my floor number, and I ask her, “What floor, ma’am?” (Yes, I say “ma’am,” because … sigh, anyway.) She says nothing, stands in the corner. Mind you, I just discovered the Candy Crush app, so if anything, I’m the rude one because I’m more obsessed with winning this particular level than anything else. In my head I’m thinking, There’s no way I can be a threat to a woman this fine if I’m buried deep in this game — so surely she feels safe.
The humor comes in that I thought she was on my floor because she never acknowledged my floor request. (She was also bangin’, so inside I was like, “Dayuuuuuuuuuuum, she lives on my floor? *bow chicka wowow*!” Instantly I was on some “What dessert am I welcome-committee-ing her with?”) Anywho, the door opens, and I waited to let her off first because I am a gentleman. (Old me would’ve rushed first, thus not putting me in the position to have to follow her, God forbid if she, too, makes a left and it seems like I’m following her.) So door opens and I flirt, “Ladies first.” She says, “This is not my floor.” Then I assume she is missing her building card, so I pulled my card out to try to press her floor yet again. She says, “That’s okay.”
Then it hit me: “Oh God, she purposely held that information back.” The door closed. It was a “pie in the face” moment.
I laughed at it. Sort of.
Inside I cried. But if I cried at every insensitive act that goes on in the name of safety, I’d have to be committed to a psych ward. I’ve just taught myself throughout the years to just accept it and maybe even see it as funny. But it kept eating at me (Well, I guess she never watched the show … My English was super clear … I called her “ma’am” like I was Webster … Those that know you know that you’re cool, but you definitely know that you are a walking rape nightmare — right, Ahmir? Of course she was justified in not saying her floor. That was her prerogative! You are kinda scary-looking, I guess?). It’s a bajillion thoughts, all of them self-depreciating voices slowly eating my soul away.
But my feelings don’t count. I don’t know why it’s that way. Mostly I’ve come to the conclusion that people over six feet and over weight regulation or as dark as me (or in my tax bracket) simply don’t have feelings. Or it’s assumed we don’t have feelings. I mean, it’s partially right: I literally figured the only way for me to not go insane in a career that creates junkies (or at best Kanye) is to desensitize myself from feelings. The thing is, though, I’m a halfway crook, an awesome poker player. Yeah, I hurt. But I’ll be damned if I let you know that. Call me a 75 percent robot, 25 percent human being.
When I got off a plane Sunday morning, after the “not guilty” verdict in the George Zimmerman trial, and I was waiting in customs, I read an apology e-mail from a friend who said, “I am wrong about many things, but I want to apologize for taking that particular story you told me too lightly.” The one about the woman in the elevator. And it kinda touched me. My friend related to me, and it was a gut-punch I wasn’t expecting on an already emotional day, so I guess I started to almost … cry?
Then the Roots’ manager Rich hits me on the phone seconds later. Boom. I know it’s sad to say, but we in the Roots circle love each other like family. But not enough to trust each other in vulnerable moments. (This is a man who waited until he was on the operating table, minutes away from surgery, to finally reveal to me he was going through a life-or-death cancer procedure, simply because he didn’t want to distract me or create excuses as to why I didn’t finish my book.) On the phone, I do my best “straighten up, stop sobbing” shtick, and he says, “What’s wrong?” In four seconds flat, I bury it, and I’m back to normal. I’m not proud of that. I’ve spent eleven of the last twenty years in therapy trying to deal with that. So I decide to abandon Operation Bury, and I say, “Well … “
“What’s wrong?” asks Rich.
How do I answer that? This does NOT feel like an average day. Remember how nice everyone was post–September 11? Eerie. Almost surreal. Like everyone is acting “too nice,” and I don’t know how to process that. Then there are people that are acting like nothing happened. (“Hey, Quest, where is Dave Chappelle at!?”) It was just one of those days that didn’t feel normal to me. But Rich keeps picking at the question like a three-month-old scab: “What’s wrong?”
And I’m like, “Need I say it!?” I can’t tell if he’s provoking me or not. I don’t know how to not internalize the overall message this whole Trayvon case has taught me:
You ain’t s###.
That’s the lesson I took from this case.
You ain’t s###.
These words are deep because these are words I’ve heard my whole life: I heard from adults in my childhood that I needed to be “about something” other than all that banging and clanging and music I play all the time. As I got older, I heard I wasn’t as good as so-and-so is at music. All the “you ain’t s###” stories I got — Jesus, it’s a wonder I made it.
Rich asks, “Wait, you’re not surprised, are you?” I’m not surprised at all, but that doesn’t mean it stings any less.
I should be angry, right? I remember when the Sean Bell verdict came out and I just knew, “Oh, God, New York is gonna go up in flames.” And yet no one was fuming. It was like, “[Shrug] … No surprises here. That’s life.”
Rich asks again, “Are you surprised … that you ain’t s###?”
It hurts to hear it, and I say, “I’m not surprised, but who wants to be reminded?” What fat person wants to hear that they aren’t pleasing to the eye? Or what addict wants to hear they are a constant F-up? Who wants to be reminded that — shrug — that’s just the way it is?
I guess I’m struggling to get at least 1 percent of this feeling back, from all this protective numbness I’ve built around me, to keep me from feeling. Because, at the end of the day, I’m still human.
… Right?”
via Prefix
Jay Electronica is finishing up his album! That’s the latest on the streets! WHOOO…wait, wait, wait…do we still care? I do! Producer Jeymes Samuel gave the scoop to NME.com:
“Honestly, it’s in the last stages of recording. It’s just tinkering. Just putting the final… you know when a builder builds a house? And when he’s finished the walls he gives them one little brush over like a on
ce over? And then the album will be done.”
“His album is amazing, it’s remarkable. It is the perfect… It goes hand in hand with ‘Yeezus’ and ‘Magna Carta…’. They go hand in hand… Also, also… It’s weird how Jay Z is intricately involved with all of us, but all the albums sound so different.”
What do you think?

We’ll see.
They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry! -illseed.
Illseed, Out.
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(AllHipHop News) The day after MTV revealed the nominees for this year’s Video Music Awards, someone decided to remind the world about perhaps the most infamous moment in VMA history. Who can forget when Kanye West ran on stage and interrupted Taylor Swift during her acceptance speech in 2009?
Kanye had a lot to say that night live on television. Apparently, he didn’t get out everything he wanted to express, because Gawker got access to an audio recording allegedly of Kanye later that night still ranting about Taylor, Elvis, Pink, MTV, and Eminem.
He also makes a reference to his mother’s passing and his own chasing of fame.
The conversation is said to have been recorded at a West Village bistro the same evening of the awards show. There is no verification that voice on the tape is actually Kanye, but going by his past public rants it sounds very similar to the Chi-town rapper.
Listen to the conversation in the video below.