Rhymefest and Skyzoo

“Crack The Code”

Cam Rebuilds Dipset; Signs Rapper Hunnedstack P.

(AllHipHop News) Cam’ron continues to rebuild his Diplomats crew on the West coast, with the signing of Inglewood, California rapper Hunnedstack P. His first release will be titled Nuclear Weapons, which will be hosted by Diplomats own, Duke Da God. Nuclear Weapons is Hunned Stack’s first official full length release for Dipset West, although he had made appearances on Dipset West’s first two street albums, World Domination and Global Warming.

“Hunnedstack has an album full of classics,” Dipset West’s CEO Omar “Iceman” Sharif told AllHipHop.com. “He’s a sure winner. Hunnedstack is not your average West coast rapper. He has a missing piece that it takes to bring the West coast back. With Cam’ron and Iceman on his side, he has a sure one way ticket to the top and his destiny is for greatness.”

In July of 2009, Cam’ron announced that he formed a new company and group named The U.N. in addition to forming a new Dipset division without original group members Jim Jones and Juelz Santana.

His new company encompasses film, music and DVD, in addition to the latest incarnation of The Dipset movement.

Over the last three years, Cam has been relatively quite, although he has stayed busy in the recording studio, by laying down over 150 songs.

Some of those tracks will surface on March 23rd, when The U.N. drops their debut album Gunz N Butta.

Snoop Highlights Cali’s Past With ‘West Coast Blueprint’

(AllHipHop News) Snoop Dogg will celebrate the 25th anniversary of Priority Records with Snoop Dogg Presents: The West Coast Blueprint, a new compilation album that digs up 16 tracks from the label’s vaults.

Priority Records helped define West coast rap with acts on the roster like Eazy-E, NWA, The D.O.C., Mack 10, Ras Kass, Yo Yo, Ice Cube and others.

The new release highlights a number of landmark recordings, including earlier singles by West coast architects like King Tee, Kid Frost, Low Profile, Luniz and others.

“You will hear how many different facets of hip-hop Priority had a hand in,” Snoop told AllHipHop.com. “Fans who might not have heard these records in a long time, I know they’re going to love hearing them again. And the youngsters who’ve never heard of them before, it’s an important education. See? Learning can be fun.”

Snoop Dogg took over as Creative Chairman of Priority Records. In addition to signing Cypress Hill, Snoop recently oversaw the re-release of three important rap albums: Eazy E’s Eazy-Duz-It, EPMD’s Strictly Business and Master P’s album Ghetto D.

“Priority’s always been associated with the west coast,” Snoop said. “Now with the power of EMI behind it, we can take this international.”

Snoop Dogg Presents: The West Coast Blueprint is in stores now.

1. Introduction to The West Coast Blueprint

2. Eazy-E – Eazy-Duz-It

3. King Tee – Act A Fool

4. The D.O.C. – No One Can Do It Better

5. Low Profile – Pay Ya Dues

6. Kid Frost – La Raza

7. Interlude

8. N.W.A – Alwayz Into Somethin’ 9. Yo-Yo featuring Ice Cube – You Can’t Play With My Yo-Yo

10. Ice Cube featuring Das EFX – Check Yo Self [Album Version]

11. Rappin’ 4-Tay – Playaz Club

12. Interlude

13. Mack 10 – Foe Life

14. Luniz – I Got 5 On It

15. Ras Kass – The Evil That Men Do

16. Westside Connection – Gangstas Make The World Go Round

17. Ant Banks featuring Too $hort, 2Pac & MC Breed – 4 Tha Hustlas

18. Mack 10 featuring Tha Dogg Pound – Nothin’ But The Cavi Hit

19. Snoop Dogg featuring Sylk E. Fine & Suga Free – Trust Me

20. Check Yo Self Interlude

21. Snoop Dogg featuring The Hustle Boyz – Check Yo Self (Snoop Dogg G-Mix) [New Recording]

Turk’s Brother Gunned Down; Rapper Seeks Assistance W/Funeral

(AllHipHop News) Incarcerated rapper and Former Hot Boy/Cash Money Millionaire group member Turk is mourning the loss of his brother, who was shot and killed Monday morning in New Orleans. According to reports, Turk’s brother Ronald Smith was gunned down behind a daiquiri shop on Manhattan Street in New Orleans, around 3:00 AM. Police have arrested 19-year-old Travis Dennis, who has admitted that he was the shooter. Turk wrote an open letter to Ozone Magazine and the media seeking assistance from the Hip-Hop community to raise funds for his brother’s burial. "I’m reaching out to all of you who have influence on the hip-hop community," Turk wrote. "My little brother and I were as close as brothers can be and it hurts me to lose him at such a young age, but as a man I must be strong." Turk has been in prison for over six years. He was sentenced to 10 years for his role in a shooting during a raid of Memphis apartment that S.W.A.T. team member injured.Like millions of people in the United States, his brother had no type of life insurance and Turk’s family cannot afford a proper burial for his younger sibling. “My mother is mourning over the loss of her youngest child and over the fact that there is no insurance or funds to arrange the proper burial,” Turk wrote. “I am asking for you to get the word out and to also help financially in any way you can. Any donations can be sent to me at the Shelby County Jail by Western Union and for those who know me personally funds can be given directly to my mother Ms. Pamela Smith." Fans looking to contribute can send money to: Western Union Blue Quick Collect Form Pay to: SSC Code City: Cobra Cash, FL Account# 2M8115125virgil Western Union can also be done over the phone call 1-800-325-6000

The Crossover Journey: Why Lebron Comes To New York

First things first – I must disclose three facts in order for you to appreciate this column.

First – yes, this is a weekly column dedicated to business concepts, models, strategies and tactics that come from my background as a personal manager, monetary economist, entrepreneur and political consultant. I apply this perspective to the music business – particularly the Hip-Hop industry and culture.

Second, I am a life-long suffering supporter of the Philadelphia 76ers.

Third, my favorite basketball player is Dirk Nowitzki (and you can check the record, I publicly acknowledged this at BlackElectorate.com back in 2002: http://www.blackelectorate.com/articles.asp?ID=745)

You need to know these things to understand 1) why I deem the subject of LeBron James basketball career as worthy for this week’s Hip-Hoppreneur ™ commentary 2) that as a sports fan I require the prayers of even atheists and agnostics (as I said – I’m a 76ers fan) and 3) that I am ‘objective’ (my favorite baller is German and plays in the Western conference/why would a 76er fan want the Knicks lifted out of an era of misery?)

While I don’t offer full Hip-Hoppreneur status to Lebron just yet, I do find some things about his personality, brand, ambition, and business pursuits to be relevant to the kinds of things I’ve been writing about at AllHipHop.com for the past few months.

If there were one past column I would like you to read for some context check my January 12, 2010, “The Business Of ‘Story’ (A Rapper’s Brand and Image)” archived by clicking here:

It is from that perspective that I will make several points as to why I believe it is not only in LeBron’s best business interests (and that of so many others) to sign with the New York Knicks but that this event is highly likely if a particular event happens first (more on that in a minute). To this point we’ll travel outwardly, then inwardly.

Using ‘Story’ To Increase Business Valuation. The most compelling argument that I could make in favor of LeBron leaving Cleveland and coming to New York is the impact it would have on the business valuation of his ‘story.’ The key to staying ‘valuable’ as a celebrity or public personality is maintaining your magnetism, the ability to attract attention, people, and opportunities in intriguing ways. This is publicly achieved through our personal story and testimony, in life and even more powerfully death (why death? See Hebrews 9: 16-17). LeBron, once he wins a championship will have reached an important stage in his storyline and a plateau in his popularity, in a significant way. From that point on, he will have to work even harder to go to the next level, remain interesting, and maintain magnetism.

As Sade has taught us, it is never as good as the first time, and once LeBron gets ring #1 the intensity of his interest to the non-basketball public will plateau and begin to wane, as we are saturated with images of his excellence. Yes, LeBron will then be on the front-end of his becoming ‘old news,’ as we will all look to the new star who can dethrone him.

In a sense, at that point LeBron risks getting mired down in the kind of debate that only matters to basketball fans – is he the greatest ever?; where do the 2010 Cavaliers rank in history?; is he better than Kobe; will he be better than Jordan or Oscar Robertson?

The only unrealized monetary value of LeBron James then, is in his international appeal and in his off-the-court celebrity and reality. Yes, he has to keep winning in order to maintain interest, but for him to be a larger-than-life figure the emphasis has to now move from winning a championship to building a brand that allows him to achieve his goal of becoming the first $1 billion athlete.

In short LeBron has to transcend sports marketing and build a sports and non-sports empire which means he has to develop a leadership profile (the right mix of activism, community connection, and philanthropy), tap new market segments as a basketball player (this may mean playing in Europe or China at some point), and dramatically increasing his non-basketball and non-personality oriented income (through lucrative investment strategies and profitable entrepreneurial and business pursuits).

The argument that LeBron can best do this in Cleveland is simply not accurate. The argument that LeBron can earn more basketball income in Cleveland is probably true but paychecks for purely balling is not the scorecard King James keeps. Yes, his team can project a ‘cool’ and ‘hot’ marketing image from Cleveland that leverages his basketball celebrity into endorsement income that dwarfs anything he makes on a court but for LeBron to go where no other athlete has gone before, he needs a more interesting story, and one that increases his business valuation. There is no more intriguing and valuable story than LeBron James coming to New York City, becoming a pillar of the community, and allowing the landscape and machine of the # 1 market in the world work to create new attributes that make his brand more valuable. Only New York takes LeBron from ‘hot’ and ‘cool’ to ‘mature,’ ‘wise,’ ‘confident,’ ‘cosmopolitan,’ and even ‘progressive,’ and ‘conscious.’

But something does have to happen first, in Cleveland.

‘LeBron, As Judas.’ A Lesser Case For Staying In Cleveland. Having praised New York a bit it is important to note that LeBron has developed valuable marketing attributes like ‘consistency’ and ‘loyalty’ by playing in his home state. That LeBron has carried the flag for Ohio, Cleveland, and Akron when he could have easily chosen not to, is without debate.

An interesting argument made by some is that LeBron risks being seen as a traitor if he leaves Cleveland and the franchise collapses. The most vocal in this regard is the popular and always entertaining Sirius/XM sports talk show host Chris ‘Mad Dog’ Russo (http://www.sirius.com/maddogradio), formerly of the ‘Mike and The Mad Dog’ program on WFAN-Am In New York City. But I think Mad Dog’s point of view is the typical perspective of the sports world. It is not a crossover-marketing point of view.

While America is susceptible to the ‘hometown’ storyline, I believe LeBron is largely immune to the charge that he has betrayed Cleveland. This is because he has shown devotion to his ‘hometown’ since his youth, and because LeBron has grown up with a media spotlight on him since middle school that the entire world has seen. Mad Dog’s argument is that LeBron ‘will never sell another sneaker in the Mid West’ if he leaves the Cavaliers but because LeBron’s most valuable market segment demographic is so young (not steeped in ‘hometown’ loyalty like older generations) and became his personal fans (and not the Cavaliers) through ESPN, video game culture, and Hip-Hop, he has never been seen as a product of a particular region. He voluntarily has decided to associate himself with Cleveland, and unlike a rapper from the 1990s who needed street creed from a particular region or neighborhood before he blows, Lebron’s strongest qualities are trans-regional, even universal [yes I believe even the folks who carved the pyramid face on Mars know his name! (http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast24may_1.htm)].

But there is one essential accomplishment that makes a Cleveland to New York move seamless – winning a championship. Unlike previous sports greats who could always justify leaving a team because they had no supporting cast (the argument Dwayne Wade is clearly about to make) the Cavaliers have shown and proved that they have given LeBron all he needs to get it done. Yes, Shaq and Antawn Jamison in one season should be enough despite Coach Mike Brown. While many argue a championship ties LeBron more closely to Cleveland, I actually think it is the event that sets him free.

As long as Cleveland wins a championship this year, the door is shut on the argument that LeBron must stay in Cleveland in order to maintain his valuable ‘loyalty’ attribute. To me, LeBron’s loving and then leaving Cleveland for a New York adventure actually makes for a more powerful storyline. The only argument, in my mine that justifies LeBron blowing hundreds of millions of dollars by not adding business value to his story would be the need of family members, for him to be in Cleveland. Not I, nor any other person, commenting on the outside, know what LeBron’s personal circumstances or domestic life require better than him, but it is hard to imagine that anyone who is already used to LeBron being on the road as much as he is couldn’t have arrangements made for them while he is in New York.

With the right spin, LeBron’s media machine can easily spin a departure of Lebron from Cleveland in terms of a child leaving the family nest, and growing up to make it on his own. Here is where a tear-jerking Nike commercial featuring LeBron’s life journey in Cleveland, ending with him overlooking the New York City skyline, accompanied by music from Frank Sinatra and Jay-Z can boost value.

I don’t think it will be hard for LeBron to manufacture genuine tears at a press conference announcing he is leaving Cleveland. If he needs words to say, he can just channel in reverse, Allen Iverson’s touching energy explaining in December why he was so happy to come back home to Philadelphia. LeBron will need ghostwriters when speaking from the heart, but here is a key part of Iverson’s remarks, “People here watched me grow as a basketball player. They came in and cheered for me night in and night out. They gave me everything they had. That’s why it was easy for me to give them everything that I got. And I don’t know how the relationship, or how they reacted the way they did, or how they felt about me the way they did or they do. I think all that was a blessing. The fans here, they watched me be me. And like I said, they let me grow as a person. They watched me go through my ups and downs and I think this is one of the realest places in the world. The passion about their sports and I gave them everything that I had and I guess that’s why they responded to me the way they did

If Lebron wins a championship, utters words like this at a press conference, keeps a home in Ohio, and constantly gives back to local community causes, he will always be a beloved figure, even in Cleveland.

The New York Brand. From a Hip-Hop perspective the only thing that I can compare LeBron signing with the New York Knicks to is Tupac signing with Death Row. Setting aside the circumstances under which he signed with Suge, while in jail, and the East-Coast West Coast tensions, and his tragic death (which still breaks my heart), the point I want to make from a business perspective is that there were only three major power centers from a creative standpoint in Hip-Hop worthy of a business association with Tupac: Wu-Tang, Bad Boy, and Death Row (I guess Rap-A-lot and So So Def deserve honorable mention). Maybe in basketball today it would be Chicago, New York, and Los Angeles.

The only one that made sense for Tupac to be affiliated with, whose brand represented the greatest and most compatible reach into new market segments was Death Row. The Wu could have added artistic innovation and iconic energy (Wu Tang Clan is to rap what Kiss was to Rock – with personalities that lend themselves to Superfriends-like marketing). And Wu Tang also could have provided the most supportive environment for Tupac’s intellectual and activist pedigree (The Nation of Gods and Earths meets the Black Panthers). Bad Boy would have reinforced Pac’s reality-based hustler-like appeal with New York City lights for added drama. But Pac was already a star, so what Wu brought to the table wasn’t needed as badly, and there was the risk that the Clan’s lover for griminess could dull Pac’s shine. The obvious tensions with Bad Boy coupled with the fact that more New York-affiliation wouldn’t endear him to his West Coast base, ruled out rolling with Puffy. Only Death Row offered Tupac new markets (Southern California-plus), a marketing machine (no one was moving units like Dre, Snoop and Tha Dogg Pound) and a celebrity floss to balance his Bay Area activist tendencies and NYC street credibility (all three of which made him an icon of female marketing, as Pac appealed simultaneously to the conscious Sistas’, around the way girls, and the standard mass of women enamored with Hollywood status symbols).

Dropping ‘California Love,’ as the first single on his first album home from prison, was brilliant, in that context.

Going to Chicago brings Lebron under Jordan’s shadow. Los Angeles (and it would have to be the Clippers) takes us into a distracting and basketball-only centered Kobe vs. Lebron storyline. Only New York makes sense for Lebron, like only Death Row made sense for Pac.

And in New York you do get an intriguing sports storyline – can LeBron bring back the legendary Knicks brand? While LeBron channels Willis Reed on the court, the city that never sleeps becomes a co-creator in bringing out the other dimensions of LeBron’s personality, off the court.

New York, as LeBron’s marketing midwife, is perhaps the strongest argument against staying in Cleveland. New York works with LeBron to shape the market while LeBron only works from Cleveland to accomplish the same as it is today. The simple everyday acts and decisions of where LeBron decides to eat, party, sleep, and worship in New York City build his brand and produce non-Basketball related business opportunities that simply could not be created by his social life, no matter how interesting, in Cleveland.

In a sense this is one of the ‘secret’ benefits of Floyd Mayweather Jr. being based out of Las Vegas, rather than his native Michigan. His home city reinforces the brand, image, and reputation that currently makes him most marketable. Mayweather Jr. would get credit for ‘loyalty’ if he lived in Grand Rapids (and he does passionately support community causes there) but can we honestly say that his brash personality and lifestyle would thrive and translate into the same level of business, in that backdrop?

And lastly, LeBron’s success in NYC is not guaranteed, so ultimately the curiosity builds over whether New York can break LeBron. It’s the ultimate non-basketball competition – man versus environment. New York has been known to make boys out of man, in every sphere of life, but particularly in sports, as the history of failed New York Yankee free agent signings alone reveals.

I may get into this in a future column but even Alex Rodriguez, though getting over the hurdle of producing in prime time as a New York City sports performer, so far, has not conquered New York in a non-sports context. Derek Jeter has. There is a huge difference.

If Lebron comes to town it is not to win back-to-back championships alone, it is also to become the King of New York.

The Example Of Michael Jordan – What Not To Do. There was nothing more humiliating than the way that Michael Jordan was fired from an executive position by the Washington Wizards. It was embarrassing and demoralizing. There are few professional sights as sad as watching the media footage of Michael Jordan drive off in his car after the meeting where he was let go. Indeed, MJ contributed mightily to his misfortune. He made huge personal and professional mistakes and errors in how he entered the D.C. scene which contributed to his downfall. I know because prominent figures in D.C. who tried to guide him would confide things to me regarding this. But the worst thing of all was his putting that uniform back on and running around in shorts again. It ‘permanently’ set back the brand-image-reputation formula he was building as a businessman and it is one of the reasons that he is not getting the credit he deserves for the worthy job he is currently doing in the front office of the Charlotte Bobcats.

There are many things Michael Jordan could teach LeBron James on and off the court and I hope they have that kind of mentor-protégé relationship, or eventually develop it. But from a business standpoint, there is nothing more instructive from Michael Jordan’s professional career than insight into the fact that for all of his success and marketing visibility, Michael Jordan is a sports-only celebrity figure. This does not mean that he is not larger-then-life in a certain way. Michael Jordan exudes ‘class,’ for sure post-basketball, and he has done a good job of keeping a mystique about him by being selective in interviews and public appearances. But with Michael Jordan there is no public display of political consciousness or activism, no definitive reputation for, or evidence of, real business savvy (as is the case with Magic Johnson), and therefore ‘cool,’ and ‘class’ have not allowed Michael Jordan to evolve past underwear pitchman. At the end of the day, Michael Jordan’s image is becoming more and more of just that of an ex great athlete – a salesman of other people’s products without a leadership profile, struggling to get things done in a world without the sound of a basketball bouncing somewhere in the background.

If there were an individual who LeBron should study who created a post-basketball reputation that married ‘class’ with ‘shrewd’ attributes it would not be Michael Jordan but Dr. J – Julius Erving.

I believe a key to the development of this reputation and image was Dr. J’s decision to force people to see him as more than an athlete, and resist the pull of an NBA front office job, which he surely could have held.

Ask around Philadelphia, when you hear Dr. J.’s name, his business relationship with Coca-Cola (as a bottler not a product pitchman), still often accompanies memories of him in a 76ers uniform.

A Name Worth More Than Gold. From a distance, and from a business perspective, I like Floyd Mayweather Jr. a lot. Some people have laughed when he has compared himself to Muhammad Ali (in terms of talent and boldness of personality), and more recently Malcolm X and Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King (for his pioneering stance on drug-testing). But I see something else in what he is expressing. Sure, ‘Money May’ hasn’t displayed the kind of consciousness or activism of Muhammad Ali, nor has he had the cultural or political impact of a Malcolm or Martin but he realizes that for him to truly be great, in the sense of life outside of sport, he has to reach their level of influence. He knows that until he does so, he will lack their credibility and only be seen as a great performer.

There is a form of credibility that every great artist knows has eluded them, which others, even their own peers have (I believe this is the unseen artistic motivation that provoked Jay-Z to ‘attack’ Nas) and which giants in one field desire from another. And this quest for credibility is rarely about chasing paper. Many of us who make money the end-all in life may be shocked to learn that billionaire Andrew Carnegie desired to be seen as ‘a man of letters,’ and was ultimately frustrated by the fact that people were more impressed with his business success than his intellect.

All of this relates to LeBron’s business ambition and the challenges he will face to create the brand and legacy that leads to the hundreds of millions of dollars he wants.

It saddened me to see Muhammad Ali ‘sell’ the name the Honorable Elijah Muhammad gave him (read it here) which brought him influence, popularity and connection to an entire world outside of America. Yet, I understand the business logic in licensing the right to use a name, voice, or image. In a sense that is partly what the music business is about – the trade and commerce of intellectual property. So I don’t self-righteously judge Muhammad Ali or the family of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in this regard (who have ‘sold’ and licensed his imagery and recordings etc….)

But what Floyd Mayweather Jr. struggles to attain and what all of these examples reveal and I hope demonstrate to LeBron James is that there is a form of monetary value that only comes from true greatness and risk-taking in life, and stretching beyond the limits that people assign to you. The greatest value that LeBron James can create for himself, and I believe the most guaranteed route to the $1 billion he seeks is to be more than a performer or athlete.

When you think of Muhammad Ali, you think of more than just athletic greatness. The same with football great Jim Brown. These are the names of ‘great men’ that will live on beyond them (and make money and create opportunities for their descendants and others).

What I believe both of those men lacked (although Muhammad Ali had moments of it), which LeBron could surpass them in, is a strong business team – spiritual, shrewd and loyal- that can balance performance value, business acumen, and legacy, and convert it into millions and even billions of dollars.

What LeBron should understand is that what makes Muhammad Ali’s name and image worth $1 billion is not his accomplishments in the ring. It is the same for Michael Jackson’s appeal. Had the ‘King of Pop’ not also been a compassionate humanitarian who did things outside of the box, he never would have generated billions of dollars.

I was impressed that LeBron eventually wanted to take a stand to change the reality of what was happening in the Darfur region of Sudan (although I believe he could have been more informed about the historical, economic and cultural context of the conflict; to educate myself and thousands of others I conducted an 11-part series at BlackElectorate.com called, ‘Asking The Right Questions About Darfur, Sudan that I hope Lebron will one day read this. But in LeBron’s evolved comments about Darfur you heard sincerity and strength. He promised to pull in others.

Then, something happened just before the Olympics that slowed him down and redirected his energies, eventually causing him to pull back from what he desired to do.

He and the entire U.S. Olympic basketball team were obviously pressured by the NBA and others to not get involve in politics, and to only concern himself with basketball matters.

It is the same dynamic that caused Carmelo Anthony just a few years ago, to listen to David Stern’s instructions to not attend an event where Minister Farrakhan was speaking, although he wanted to. An embarrassed Carmelo would eventually tell the Minister what happened. To which the Minister responded that Carmelo Anthony should never allow anyone, even David Stern, to limit his freedom as a man.

I have always shied away from publicly calling professional athletes and entertainers ‘slaves.’ I love them. I see their potential for greatness beyond entertainment value, even if they don’t pursue it.

I never want to see their opportunities limited in life or business. I also don’t believe in forcing people to act like they are politically and spiritually conscious when they are not. I also believe that many activists blame the lack of celebrity participation in certain causes to cover their own lack of success and progress.

But there is something to be said for the manner in which popular male celebrities and athletes are emasculated, pressured or advised against forms of consciousness and activism when they seek to create a name for themselves outside of their particular profession. The argument usually made to them is that they will risk losing lucrative business opportunities if they take particular stands.

Yes, this may be true for the commercial forces that sponsor that particular professional sport, but there is an entire world (and economy) that remains available for those who do take risks and stand for causes and associate themselves with movements that are bigger than sport and play. In this era of globalization, social media, and viral and guerrilla marketing it is easier to do business outside of the authority of a sports sanctioning body. But it takes courage and vision to build a business model without the ‘expressed written permission’ of the NBA or NFL, for that matter.

I believe LeBron and his team know this, but I don’t know whether they have what it takes to truly be ‘different’ and revolutionary in this area.

Only time will tell.

New York City will challenge LeBron – intellectually, politically, and spiritually. It will force him to look inward, in ways that the comfort zone and familiarity of Cleveland cannot. The ability to leave an environment where you feel comfortable and succeed where you are not welcome in certain ways, causes struggle which forces growth.

As long as it does not hurt his family and he wants to, I hope LeBron will accept this exciting opportunity.

Proverbs 22:1 reads, “A good name is more desirable than great riches; to be esteemed is better than silver or gold.” In the long-term what makes a name more valuable than gold (but quite valuable in it too!) and live on to create value long past the death of any particular personality, is the power of their personal struggle and the attachment of a human being’s heart, mind, and soul, to eternal principles of freedom, justice and equality.

Any celebrity who associates their name with such attributes will forever be ‘wealthy.’

In that sense, I believe that LeBron James’ coming to New York would be more about his inward journey than an outward one.

And certainly about more than his dribbling and bouncing of a ball, in a new uniform.

Cedric Muhammad is a business consultant, political strategist, and monetary economist. He is also a former GM of Wu-Tang Management and a Member of the African Union’s First Congress of African Economists. He is author of the book, The Entrepreneurial Secret (http://theEsecret.com/). His talk show, ‘The Cedric Muhammad and Black Coffee Program’ can be viewed every Wednesday from 12 to 5 PM EST (USA) at: http://www.cedricmuhammad.com/media/. He can be contacted via e-mail at: cedric(at)cmcap.com

Tiger Woods: The Tale of a fallen Role Model that rolled Models

 

AP Photo/Denis Poroy

The story of Tiger Woods is one that if ended today, would live on in the annals of infamy; the spaceship-like rise and meteoric fall of one of the greatest athlete’s of our generation; from childhood, the subject of racial slurs on the golf course, to manhood, the subject of respect, love and admiration on the same golf course. Over the past few months, many have questioned Tiger’s decision making. How could questionably the most clutch athlete on the planet, place his wealth generating image and marriage on the line, for multiple tryst around the globe? Taking it a step further, why should he matter; what is the big deal with his infidelity and why was an apology a mandatory step to his comeback?

Tiger Woods matters simply because he is a “global example” at our fingertips whether a person chooses to accept him or not. Tiger matters because he took it upon himself not to allow for his color to be bigger than his work ethic. Some would even say that his decision to be ethnically neutral opened up an acceptance to his totality as a person. This totality in a small way, smoothed out the path for then Senator, now President Obama to walk. When you take this into account, it was only right that Tiger spoke at President Obama’s Inauguration a little over a year ago.

The African-American community has taken shots at Tiger for not taking full grasp of his African-American background. But just ask yourself, how could he take full grasp of something that he is not 100% of? If it helps, there are Asians out there that feel slighted by Tiger as well. And for this alone, Tiger matters. From his ethnic background, to his choice in sports, to his billionaire bank account, how could he be understood by anyone, let alone, be relatable. He quite frankly, walks this earth alone.

Why are Tiger and his transgressions a big deal? Because in a world where politicians, athletes, celebrities and the people close to our hearts have found it necessary let us down, Tiger, from his elevated perch, had the opportunity to do better and be better. The big deal was Tiger being a married man. If Tiger was a single man, people would’ve put his actions alongside those of a Derek Jeter, Gerard Butler, or George Clooney as bachelors without a cause. Tiger had a family, a company, and a foundation full of children that saw him as, wait for it, a Role Model.

Wow, I remember role models. A role model realized that their life began in the eyes of those that believed in him or her. Only responsible people need apply. When apologies left Tiger’s lips this past Friday, he had to face those glittering eyed faces that he let down. These are the very people that he selfishly disregarded because he wanted something for himself. He felt “entitled”. It was Tiger that put in thousands of hours on golf courses around the world to be the best. It was Tiger that endured people being cruel to him as a child when all he wanted to do was play the sport he loved so much. It was Tiger that watched on as an African-American golfer told ESPN that, “Tiger owed him his dream.” Like previously noted, he walks this earth alone.

As for the apology, it was great television to some, and a much needed breath of truth for others. Tiger let down a whole slew of people, especially the companies that used his likeness to sell product. Noticeably absent was his wife, Elin. It hasn’t been brought to anyone attention why Elin, or anyone from her family for that matter was present for the apology. When it is all said and done, the most disloyal actions from Tiger landed squarely in Elin’s lap. The fact that she wasn’t present showed strength on her part and once again, left Tiger on an island. Elin Woods, role model.

In the coming months, golf fans, professional golfers including the Professional Golf Association will be patiently waiting for Tiger to make his return. Golf fans which were force fed the theatrics of Woods, are subject to regular golfers that don’t pump their fists after sinking a putt. Ratings are down 40 to 50% to start off the season. Tiger’s competition will lose money because of his absence. When ratings drop, sponsorship payouts do the same. And the PGA is desperate to no end. They need Tiger more than Tiger needs golf. Losing 40 to 50% of your ratings on a weekly basis could cost the PGA millions, maybe hundreds of millions of dollars over time. So now do you understand why this man had to stand before the world and say that he was sorry? Tiger is sorta like a big deal.

 

 

 

Lil Jon To Release ‘Crunk Rock’ This June

(AllHipHop News) Rapper Lil Jon has announced his highly anticipated and long-delayed album Crunk Rock will land in stores this June.

A split with his former label TVT Records led to a new deal with Universal Republic Records, the company that will handle the marketing and distribution of the album.

Lil Jon assembled a diverse number of top artists to round out Crunk Rock, which is his first official album release in four years.

Crunk Rock boasts appearances by The Game, Pitbull, Soulja Boy, Ying Yang Twins, R. Kelly, LMFAO, Elephant Man, David Guetta, 3OH!3 and others.

“I’m finally ready to get Crunk Rock out there to my people,” Lil Jon stated. “It’s been a long time comin’ and the album has somethin’ for everyone on it.”

The album is labeled a “lifestyle party album,” that features mash up of genres, including electro-house music merged with hip-hop, pop, and R&B.

“I gave them every kind of Lil Jon that they have ever heard on an album,” Lil Jon revealed. “From the crunk sh*t, to R&B, to house, electro and rock. The album is on a whole other level. I can’t wait for da’ people to hear it.”

Lil Jon’s Crunk Rock is due in stores June 8.

Exclusive: Waka Flocka Talks Method Man

It started with a simple interview with DJ Whoo Kid, where Waka Flocka, protégée of Gucci Mane, chimed in on rappers with a penchant for lyrics.

“The n***a that everybody [feels] is lyrical, they ain’t got no shows. I don’t even care about selling records. As long as I get them shows for $15,000, four to five days out the week, I’m happy,” he said.

The statement raised the ire of a number of artists and fans, but the loudest voice seemed to be that of Method Man, one of Wu Tang’s finest. In an interview at Sirius satellite radio, he vented.

“It’s all good. He has the right to his own mother**king opinion. Let him feel that way, but the people that are in the know, that know what time it is, know that if you ain’t saying s**t out your mouth, your time is very slim in this mother**kin game.”

AllHipHop.com talked with Waka Flocka, who explained his feelings about Meth, from growing up on the Shaolin wordsmith to the present day.

See it in the video below.

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AHH Stray News: T.I., Flo Rida/Sean Kingston/MC Lyte

T.I. made his first public appearance at a benefit concert in Atlanta last night (February 22). The rapper appeared at Opera, where his wife Tomeka “Tiny” Cottle was hosting the “For The Love of Our Fathers” benefit concert/taping for Alzheimer’s research. The event was filmed for Cottle’s BET reality show Tiny and Toya. “I am very well, very happy to be seen,” T.I. said at the end of the event, which featured performances by OMG Girlz, Pleasure P., Kandi and others. Rapper Flo Rida and R&B singer Sean Kingston have been announced as the first international perform for the 2010 Formula 1 Gulf Air Bahrain Grand Prix. The pair will perform on March 13th, as the FIA Formula 1 World Championship’s celebrate their 60th anniversary. The concert will take place at Bahrain International Circuit and will include a performance by Arab singer Hussain Al Jasmi. MC Lyte has landed a syndicated radio show that will debut in early March, according to published reports. Lyte’s new show is titled Café Mocha and also features co-hosts comedienne Loni Love and radio veteran Angelique Perrin. According to the show’s executive producer Sheila Elridge, the show is similar to the hit TV series The View, but geared towards African-American women aged 18-49. Café Mocha will be distributed nationally by Super Radio.

Eminem “Excited” To Head To Europe; Announces Dates

(AllHipHop News) Eminem’s European fans will catch a glimpse of the Detroit rapper this summer, where he will give his first performances of 2010.

Eminem will perform at three different festivals this summer, Scotland’s T In The Park, Switzerland’s Openair Frauenfeld and Ireland’s Oxegen festival.

The concerts mark Eminem’s first live European show in five years and his first ever appearance at T in the Park. “I’m excited to get back to Europe to rock some shows,” said Eminem. “The crowds there are always big, crazy and dedicated…it’s going to be great to feel that energy again.”Eminem will be joined by Jay-Z at the 16th annual Openair Frauenfeld, where over 40,000 fans are expected to attend. In addition to Jay-Z and Eminem, over 200,000 fans are expected to attend The Oxegen Festival, which also features performances by D-12, The Black Eyed Peas, John Mayer and others. Details on all three dates are listed below:7/9-7-11 Balado Kinross-Shire, Scotland T in the Park

7/9-7-11 Gampel, Switzerland Openair Frauenfeld

7/9-7-11 Dublin, Ireland Oxegen

Hip-Hop Rumors: T.I.’s Shows Up! Who Got Pistol Whipped? 5 Years For Jayson Williams

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.

T.I. POPS UP AND GIVES TINY THE GIFT OF A GOOD WOMAN!

I love that T.I. has been out of the limelight for quite some time. I heard he is doing some work and preparing for his anticipated comeback! But, ajc.com is reporting that Tip made his first public appearance since coming out of jail. He attended a fundraiser for Alzheimer’s research. He said:

“I am very well, very happy to be seen.”

After the event, T.I. gave Tiny, who had performed that night, a damn PORCHE with a bow on top! She said, “I’m so glad to have him home.” I bet you are! LOL

WHAT RAPPER LIVES IN WOODLAND HILLS?

I don’t know much about LA, but there is an area called Woodland Hills and in that era there is a place where a rap label owns a home. That home is where they housed rappers and visitors. well, that place was robbed. According to the LA Times:

Officers went to the home in the 22100 block of Mulholland Drive about 1 a.m. Sunday after a report that two men and two women broke into the home during what was described as a “party or gathering.” More than a dozen people were victims of and/or witnesses to the crime, but police said they were uncooperative. Police did not immediately identify the rap label that owns the home.

The pistol whipping was covered in AHH news, but nobody is saying anything. So, who owns or rents that house?

JET AND EBONY DON’T GET MAGIC

I think that’s the other way around. Apparently, Magic Johnson was trying to buy both Ebony and Jet. The two companies were unable to reach a settlement on the amount to pay. Nobody knows the full deal

EPIC FAIL OF THE DAY

In Moscow, Ohio there is some failing going on. An Ohio man thought he was about to get slick and get out of his home getting forclosed on. The dude bulldozed his $350,000 home to stop a bank from taking it from him. Terry Hoskins did the deed, but he is not out of the woods yet. He admits to owing the 160k on the house, but didn’t want anybody to have it, especially the bank! He said the RiverHills Bank and the IRS have been breathing down his neck for years. I don’t really know where the fail is here, but somebody failed. He probably should have given up the house to ease the bill. Period.

SIGNS THE WORLD IS COMING TO AN END!

This isn’t going to happen, but if it does…the END! Mike Vick was offered a million bucks to pose for Playgirl magazine. If he does he would then give the million to PETA…why? Apparently, PETA gets money when animals are treated cruelly. VICK BET NOT! IF he does, he can no longer be a Philly Eagle! LOL! Nevertheless, there is no formal word on whether or not Vick is going to do it. I personally don’t think he will. And if he has to donate a MILLION, it better go to some needy KIDS.

RYAN LESLIE IN GERMANY!

My homey RiotLife hit me up:

Ryan Leslie was in Cologne, Germany this Weekend and had a soldout show. S**t was packed and he gave a good show, even though he came across a bit too theatrical for my taste… To me hes still more a studio cat than a full fledged artist. whatever…

Here comes the tidbit: During the show he apparently lost an expensive ring, making him stop the show. Did anybody snatch it off his fingers like he was 50 in Angola? Nope. The good people in Cologne found the ring in the crowd and willingly handed it back. He seemed glad but surprised so he got back to his show! If I´d  found it I´d have kept it…

Now, those are some good people in Cologne, Germany!

ILLSEED’S QUICKIES

Evander Holyfield isn’t going on Dr. Phil to talk about his personal life and marriage.

Nature Boy Ric Flair got whooped by his wife! Stop domestic violence everywhere!

Former NBA star Jayson Williams has been sentenced to 5 years in prison for the 2002 accidental shooting death of his limo driver. Not a good day for sports men!

By the way, as far as Freeway and Jake One…there is a reason for people clamoring over the actually physical album. ITS A COLLECTOR’S ITEM!

Jay-Z and Eminem are reportedly headlining a show over in Scotland! Nice!

CHANCE ENCOUNTERS!

BRAND NEW WE ARE THE WORLD

I’d say we were all pretty upset with the way the “We Are The World” remake turned out, especially the random sub-par Hip-Hop performances.  Well the homeys over at Hood Newz wanted to get it right for Hip-Hop…Check out the We Are The World (Hip-Hop Remix) featuring DJ Khaled, T-Pain, Dr. Dre, Drake, Kid Cudi, Rick Ross, Young Jeezy, Akon, Eminem, DMX & Christopher Walken.

Starts at :38 seconds:

SONIC IS BACK!!!

There was a lot of buzz around Charles Hamilton a year ago then he p##### Detroit off, got punched in his face by his lady friend, got dropped from his label and was eclipsed by Drake’s rise to fame.  Well he’s back and ready to get back on his sh*t.  You checking for Chucky???

LOOK AT THAT CHIN

Natalie Nunn, Chris Brown’s rumored conquest and Bad Girls Club star, ran into Lil Duval on a recent flight and he was going in or her…LMAO:

Also this guy claims he has a sex tape with Natalie.  He’s trying to sell it.  You want to see it???

METHOD MAN WANTS LYRICS

Earlier this year lyrical juggernaut Wacka Flocka, basically said you don’t have to be lyrical to be a successful rapper and even claimed that lyrical rappers weren’t getting any money.  Well Method Man has answered Mr. Flocka saying:

“Let him feel that way, but the people that know what time it is, know that if you ain’t saying sh*t out your mouth, then your time is very slim in this muthaf**kin game.”

I’d have to go with Meth on this one.  He’d probably know a little bit more about longevity than Wacka.

THREE SIX MAFIA NOT FEELING JAY

Well a former member of Three Six Mafia by the name of Young D does.  He didn’t take kindly to Jay claiming he doesn’t believe in the Devil or organized religion so he’s coming for his neck.  Ummmm…I’d say the homey Bizzle did a good enough job addressing this already.

DRAKE GOES BACK TO SCHOOL

The first quarter is almost over with no single or album from Drake.  I don’t know the time frame for the project but I know a lot of people want that.  Well never fear Drake is hard at work on his debut Thank Me Later and has been studying early Nas and Andre 3000.  Check him out here talking about preparing to make the album:

I’M JUST SAYIN

Reggie Bush was upset with Kim for running out on the field when they won the Super Bowl … apparently he thinks she stole his thunder … they’re saying he told her “this is my night not yours”.

I’m so mad those cops got off yesterday.  SO MAD.

The internets are saying Alicia Keys and Swizz Beats plan on getting married this summer on a Yacht in Miami…wonder if Mashonda will pop up???

Isn’t Beyonce taking a “break”???  Well her songs aren’t… a couple leaked this past week.

Suge Knight’s stuff was auctioned off to pay his storage bill.  His belongs made $4,500.

A security guard who used to work for American Idol sent Fantasia a hate letter full of racial slurs…she got nervous and called the cops.  I’m still stuck on her reading…wow (i kid i kid).

L.A. Reid flew to Belize via private Jet to deliver Shyne’s Def Jam contract.  Looks like it’s official now.

PEACE – CHANCECDR @ TWITTER FACEBOOK & GMAILJAY and B, 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 [email protected].

Memphis Bleek: The Process of Determination

Memphis Bleek strolls into a small café in a quiet suburb of Central Jersey. He walks through the front door with an air of confidence that screams “Brooklyn.” His demeanor says it all (even though his shirt says it too). He’s noticed by a a few folks that talk to him about their aspirations, not realizing that Bleek himself still has some unfinished business in this music game. While confident, the veteran is changing…evolving before our collective eyes.

It’s been almost five years since the public has truly heard from the Memphis Bleek of old and nearly a year since he formally left The Roc. His last Roc-A-Fella album, 534 (2005), did not fare as well as expected even though it was well received. Shortly after, Bleek took a hiatus from recording. He’s continued to support long-time friend and mentor, Jay-Z, through his various incarnations.

But, where does that leave Bleek, the young gun that was always supposed to take the torch long ago? It leaves Memph man with new lease on life and a renewed faith in himself. Strategically, he’s prepping a new album while navigating through different waters and, every so often, recollects a time long gone. AllHipHop.com:

What have you been doing since your last album?Memphis Bleek:

Just working. We got a detailing shop in Edison, NJ. It’s called Custom Car Details. I’ve been over here working on custom cars. A new album. You know, doing music, trying get outta the Def Jam situation once Jay left. You know, get my own situation.AllHipHop.com:

Are you currently released from Roc-a-Fella? Whose decision was it?

Memphis Bleek:

It was a mutual decision between me and Jay because he was leaving Def Jam to start Roc Nation. So the whole thing was like “Yo’, how long am I gonna be the little man?” I been an Indian all my life. I gotta be the Chief one day. I gotta bunch of people behind me that wanna shine. Me being under him they never gonna get a chance. So, he agreed. He said it was the best thing and that people are gonna respect me for making my own decision and for being a man and stepping out of that shadow, which is an unbelievable show to even try to get out of. So, it was a mutual decision. We both came to the agreement that going independent might be the best way to do my thing right now. AllHipHop.com:

You’re currently signed with Mass Appeal Entertainment, right? Memphis Bleek:

Yeah.AllHipHop.com:

What has that experience been like? Memphis Bleek:

Aww man, a learning process. The guy who owns it, Marcus Siskind, me and him met through my lawyer. We built a cool relationship. He’s teaching me things that I’ve never known. Before, (at a major label) I would just put the beat on, I rap, I smoke, we drink, and put it on the radio. Now, it’s like I’m finding out the politics behind the scenes.

Memphis Bleek Is Forever Roc, Talks The Critic Jay-Z

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AllHipHop.com:

How do you deal with the politics of the industry? Memphis Bleek:

I try not to let it affect me. Rules are rules but there also meant to be broken. You know what I’m saying? So everybody follows a certain trend and the politics. Me, I like to go around the corner and double back on people, like come back. So if you spending 80 grand on it, I’ma find somebody who’s gon’ work just as hard for 20. He’ll probably work triple times harder. The politics to me, I just like to reverse it and find the edge that works best for me. AllHipHop.com:

We’ve seen the negatives and positives of going independent. Now that you’re not with Roc-a-Fella, are you concerned at all with records sales, promotion, or public perception of your future projects?

Memphis Bleek:

Nah, I’m a well respected dude. I’m always gonna be connected to the Roc thing regardless of how far I move away from it or say I ain’t down with it. When people see Memphis Bleek, it’s gon’ say Roc, regardless. The promotion for this album is gonna be done by me. If you ask me somebody drop the ball of 5.3.4. But I don’t blame nobody. I just take it like a man and say hey, I’ma blame myself this time. You feel me? It’s a new ball game now.

AllHipHop.com:

Let’s talk about your last album, 534. A lot of people felt like it didn’t do as well as it should. What are your thoughts on that? Memphis Bleek:

I definitely feel like the ball was dropped. I had big records on there. I had the first record with Rihanna before people even knew who she was. “The One”. And I had another follow up record produced by Irv Gotti. “Infatuated”. With the lead of “Like That” Produced by Swizz, which was ringing in every club and to this day, crazy! That right there let me know somebody dropped the ball on that single. That album was just crazy, I had a lot of good records on there and I just feel like it was a waste of effort. I did my part and the label didn’t do they part. Not necessarily saying it was Roc-a-Fella that didn’t do they part. It was Def Jam that didn’t do they part. And I couldn’t blame Jay because Jay had just become the President. So it’s like you got a whole new staff. How can I, “it’s your fault dog!”? It ain’t never his fault. I ain’t blame no body, I just took it as a loss and kept it moving. And here we go with “The Process”. Trust me, we gon’ pick up from where that one left off at. Memphis Bleek Talks Jay-Z Illuminati Rumors, Ja Rule And Beanie Sigel

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AllHipHop.com:

Do you feel you’re in a different space musically?

Memphis Bleek:

Definitely, because now I’m doing the music from the heart and not as a business. It’s like when I first started. When you first start making music, you’re doing what you love. You’re just writing rhymes that you honest felt, you saying what you felt and what you thought of on the spot, picking the right beats. And then something happens and people say “oh, that’s a hit, it’s a radio record, it’s a club banger”. And then it becomes a business to an artist cause now it’s like you’re tryna recapture what you did. When in all reality you can’t recapture that, you just have to go back to having fun. So that’s what I’m back to. Now that I put the fun aspect back into it, we’re back to making good records. AllHipHop.com:

What’s your ultimate goal in this industry? How do you plan to get there? Memphis Bleek: 

One day at a time. My ultimate goal is to prove something to myself. Like, nobody gives me credit. I’ve never been given any credit. Everything in my life, it’s always been…and because of Jay. He’s here because of Jay. He did this because of Jay. I can name a lot of people who was signed to the Jay umbrella just like me. But if I never did “Memph Bleek is”’, “Mind Right”, “What Chu’ Think of That”, or “Do My”, there would be no Memphis Bleek, for real. Now that I’m on my own, I wanna show my behind the scenes talent. I can prove myself as an artist and maybe people will give me my respect.

Memphis Bleek Talks His Ultimate Goal

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AllHipHop.com:

Do you blog? Do you read blogs? Memphis Bleek: 

I’m not a blogger but I definitely do read the blogs. I read the comments. It’s fuel for a guy like me because I love to hear what people gotta say. If you look at it, on a percentage scale, 20% of the s### is real, and 80% of the s### is b####### but that 20% is what matters. Somebody is gonna comment something real that you can take wit’ you and put into your craft or your daily routine. Somebody gon’ care about you.

AllHipHop.com:

What is your relationship with your former label mates (Beanie, Amil, etc.)?

Memphis Bleek: 

I haven’t seen Amil every since we did “Hey Papi”. I haven’t seen Beans every since we did Powerhouse. I speak to Freeway here and there. I just spoke to Young Chris and Young Neef not too long ago. I ain’t seen Petey Crack ever since he went on his little thing against Jay. I spoke to Oschino not too long ago. And Sparks just e-mailed me like a week ago. If you ask me, everybody still cool. I ain’t got no problems with nobody. AllHipHop.com:

Beanie was saying some things about you and Jay being fake. What is your response to that?Memphis Bleek:

(says in a sarcastic tone) Yea, I’m mad fake. (laughs) I’ma keep it all the way real, Beans is my brother. I been knowing Beans since I was 16 years old. I grew up with Beans. We been through ups, downs, flossin to not flossin to now. I can’t down that man. There’s nothing I can say bad about him to discredit him. He may feel like he need to do that to get to where he needs to be but where I need to be, it don’t involve him and it don’t involve me discrediting him. That’s always gon be my dude. AllHipHop.com:

Beanie has also expressed his feelings about Jay saying that he would “pass the baton” to Lil’ Wayne back when was said he would “retire”. How did you feel about that? Memphis Bleek:

I mean it’s cool. Those some big shoes to fill and if you ask me Lil’ Wayne doing his thing. He is like the next dude running the industry right now if you wanna be realistic. Now am I gonna say that there’s someone better than me, I’m never gonna say that. Jay can say he wants to pass the baton to who ever he feel. That’s his decision. It’s on me to take the baton from who he give it to. (laughs)

Memphis Bleek Talks Going Indie

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AllHipHop.com:

Do you think the whole situation with Jay and Dame affected your career in any way?Memphis Bleek:

It affected everybody. I’ma be honest. Look at everybody. I’m over here tryna run a label and learn the industry. Beans over there doing what he do. Freeway dropped an album with Jake One, which is a good album by the way. Everybody’s running off scrambling now. When at one time there was one table, with however many chairs with one plan and we accomplished it. Now, it’s crazy, so it affected everybody. Dame helped me in my career. And that’s between me and him. He knows what he did for me and I can’t discredit him neither. Whatever he went through with Jay, that’s between them. I was young. They ain’t never sat down, showed me no contacts and talk business with me so I don’t know what happened. I just know we ain’t down no more. AllHipHop.com:

You recently saw Dame in London, right?Memphis Bleek: 

You see, that’s the thing with about the internet. That footage you’re talking about is so old. That was like 2 years ago. The footage was taken during the Water for Life tour. I saw Dame there. He was with that group, The Cool Kids. I tried to bring him [Jay] to see him [Dame]. I had left for a minute. I went looking for our dressing room and when I came back they was gone. After The Cool Kids performance, I guess that’s when they left. But yea, I tried to get them to bump heads. I wanted to see what was gon’ go on. (laughs)Do Jay and Dame talk at all? I think they spoke or bumped heads a few times. There’s no beef. That’s what I be tryna tell people man, it ain’t no beef. It’s like if me and you made 100 million and I took 50 and you took 50, how we got beef? If you mess your 50 up that’s on you. That ain’t my fault. Not sayin’ that’s what happened but ain’t no beef man. People just make things up. A problem ain’t a problem until somebody in the hospital. AllHipHop.com:

So let’s get back to your album. Are the songs that are on the internet going to be on the album? Nah. ”Still Ill” will be on the album, just to let people know we working. Nothing else that was leaked on the internet will be on the album. I just released a bunch of free music. Hoping that when I do drop my album people are gonna feel it and support me. I done showed you love, show me love. I don’t really have no features on this album. This album is so personal to me, it’s like I’m tryna showcase so much that I don’t even have time to call nobody, wait for nobody, I’m tryna go in. I’m 9 songs deep right now. I got all new producers. I got 2 produced by Just Blaze and I’m, man (lets out a sigh of relief) I think it’s gonna be album I ever recorded. That’s my opinion personally. At first it would be “Made”, but this includes the same energy from “Coming of Age” and “Made”. It’s like taking those them two albums and combining them.

Memphis Bleek Talks Taylor Swift, Kanye, Eminem & PR Stunts

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AllHipHop.com: When is the album scheduled for release?Memphis Bleek:

There’s no scheduled date right now. I’m hoping for July.AllHipHop.com:

Who do you think is your competition? Memphis Bleek:

Everybody!AllHipHop.com:

There’s no one person?

Memphis Bleek: 

Jay. Because he my biggest critic. Jay is the type of person, it’s never right. I don’t care how much I can sit in my house, record 20 thousand records and I can say “this one is the record!” Ain’t nothing no body can tell me that’s gonna change my mind. And soon as I get to the office, he be like that’s b#######. You for real thinking that’s crazy? And I be looking at him like “Am I bugging? Or is it you?” He’s my biggest critic. I’m tryna always get his approval and make the boss happy. And it’s never gonna happen I see (laughs)I definitely gotta come from the street first.

AllHipHop.com:

What do you think is one of the biggest misconceptions about Bleek? What is it that you think people don’t know about Memphis Bleek?

Memphis Bleek:

That I’m a stand up guy, like I’m straight up real. I think the biggest misconception I think people have about me is that I’m like a follower. They don’t understand that, I roll by myself everyday. No matter where I go. Like, I don’t see Jay unless it’s a studio session, a show, or a big event. Or if we going to his house for Sunday dinner. Other than that hanging in the street, I’m with my Get Low team. That’s the biggest misconception that we (him and Jay) are in the studio everyday together, picking beats, eating brunch together, flying on the G5 to France and coming back, no! (laughs) People think my life is a Malibu Bay Breeze but in reality its Hennessy straight. I just want people to understand, it’s just me. And this album is gon’ debut that.