Roddy Ricch Talks Moving Beyond The Success of “The Box”

Roddy Ricch’s “The Box” was one of the biggest songs of 2019. The Please Excuse Me for Being Antisocial track spent eleven weeks at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.

Over the next three years, Ricch released other singles such as 2021’s “Late at Night” and 2022’s “Stop Breathing.” However, the California-bred rapper has yet to duplicate the solo success of his breakout hit.

Apple Music 1’s Zane Lowe recently spoke to Roddy Ricch about his forthcoming Feed The Streets 3 project. The conversation also included Ricch reflecting on moving past “The Box” as a triumphant release.

“That’s not easy,” admitted Roddy Ricch, before adding, “It’s just a lot going on and that’s all a lot of people think or whatever. Sometimes we’re just humans.”

The 24-year-old Atlantic recording artist continued, “You’ll just be thinking like, ‘Damn. Okay. I already did this or I already did that.’ It’s really just time to do what I know I got to do. You know what I’m saying?”

Roddy Ricch Is Almost Ready To Release A New Body Of Work

Ricch’s “The Box” earned Grammy Nominations for Song Of The Year, Best Rap Song, and Best Melodic Rap Performance. The Recording Industry Association of America certified “The Box” as Diamond (10x-Platinum) in December 2021.

In addition to “The Box” topping the Billboard Hot 100, Roddy Ricch scored another #1 song on the chart as a guest feature on “Rockstar” by DaBaby. That collaboration remained in the top spot for seven weeks in 2020.

As of press time, Roddy Ricch has yet to return to the Hot 100’s Top 10 region. He does have twenty-five career entries on the chart, including the Grammy-winning “Racks In The Middle” by Nipsey Hussle which peaked at #26.

Feed Tha Streets 3 will arrive this Friday, November 18. Roddy Ricch’s 15-track project features Lil Durk and Ty Dolla $ign. The original Feed Tha Streets mixtape dropped in 2017. Feed Tha Streets II followed a year later.

Stormzy Reveals How Maya Jama Split Changed Him: “I Was A Boy” 

Stormzy opened up about his heart-breaking split with Maya Jama, revealing the breakup caused him to go on a journey of self-discovery that took him from a boy to a man.  

The South London rapper began dating the U.K. TV presenter in 2016. Despite fans dubbing the celeb pair “couple goals,” they split four years later in 2019.  

During a new interview for British GQ‘s GQ Men of the Year special issue, cover star Stormzy admitted the experience changed him.  

“I’d never experienced a breakup and the feelings that come with a breakup,” Stormzy explained of his split with Maya Jama. “And I never wanted to ever be in a position again where I felt what I was feeling. Because it showed me that I was a boy. And I do not want to go any further as a boy. I’ve seen how that manifests in other people. And I don’t want to be like that.” 

The “Disappointed” hitmaker realized he needed to make drastic changes to avoid making the same mistakes again.  

“So what is the necessary work I have to do to make sure I’m not in this position again?” Stormzy questioned. “That means growth, accountability, changing my character, changing my routines, my habits, my tradition, my values, my morals. Because how I feel right now and how I’ve made someone else feel and how I’ve devastated a world that I was living in – I just never want to be in this position again. So what do I need to do?” 

Stormzy understood that his own success was holding him back from making changes. However, a trip to Jamaica with Adele, followed by a family visit to Ghana, and a boy’s “a spiritual and health retreat” in Dubai, helped him achieve some grounding. In addition, he famously ditched social media, which also helped him on his path to growth.  

That growth is evident in his comeback music. His first single in four years, “Mel Made Me Do It,” is an ode to Black British cultural excellence. Stormzy followed up with “Firebabe,” the second single, taken from his forthcoming album, This Is What I Mean. The song is a clear departure from his Grime roots and sees the rapper flex his singing skills. Watch the video below.  

Meanwhile, Stormzy and Maya Jama are on good terms, despite the split and were recently spotted sharing a hug. The pair ran into each other earlier this month while attending Kendrick Lamar’s concert at London’s O2 Arena. 

Nicki Minaj Ignores Backlash, Confirms 2022 Qatar World Cup Song  

Nicki Minaj ended the speculation over her appearance on the 2002 World Cup anthem, confirming she is on the track despite the controversy surrounding it.  

The “Super Freaky Girl” hitmaker teased the track on Monday (Nov. 14), adding a cryptic slide to the end of her latest Instagram reel. After thanking her fans for her MTV EMAs win, she shared an image of three pairs of football boots.  

Each boot has the name of the song’s performers’ Nicki Minaj, Colombian singer Maluma and Lebanese singer Myriam Fares. Additionally, the three numbers on the boots hinted at the single’s release date: Friday, November 18.  

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However, the Babrz and other music fans were outraged at the move, pointing to the host Qatar’s firm anti-LGBTQ+ stance. Many were concerned Nicki Minaj has a loyal queer fanbase, unable to safely visit Qatar to watch the World Cup.  

One fan tagged Nicki Minaj, writing: “Not sure if you’re aware but your LGBTQ+ supporters from Qatar are in danger and you’re funding and standing by their disgusting views. Qatar was voted as the one of the worst places in the world to be gay. homosexuality is illegal and punishable by imprisonment.”  

“Nicki Minaj doing a song for the Qatar cup when that country is violently homophobic and against the rights of LGBTQ+ is something, especially considering majority of her fanbase are apart of that community,” wrote another.  

Nonetheless, Nicki confirmed the track on Tuesday, posting a pre-save link to the official 2022 World Cup anthem.  

“Tukoh Taka” is scheduled to be released on Friday, two days before the World Cup kicks off on November 20.  

Diddy Reveals He Pays Up To $5,000 For A Haircut 

As a Hip-Hop icon and music industry mogul, Diddy knows the importance of looking and feeling good. 

With a young, successful “Shawty Wop” on his arm, the Bad Boy Records founder is prepared to pay a style premium, as he revealed in a recent video. On Monday (Nov. 14), Diddy took to Instagram showing off his fresh haircut.  

After showing off his freshly coiffed follicles, Diddy revealed, “It’s $1,000 a cut.” Knowing fans would likely be shocked at the huge sum, the “Gotta Move On” rapper explained: “For real, because this my barber and I share my barber with the world, he’s one of the best. But I’m outside, outside so I need my hair done every five minutes.” 

Furthermore, Diddy is happy to shell out even more if he has to keep his barber around for the day. “My daily price is $5,000,” he said before adding, “I’m just telling you the truth.” 

Diddy then turned to his celebrity barber, Marcus telling him, “I love you brother. Don’t take less than $1,000. Know your worth, king.” Check out the clip below. 

https://youtube.com/shorts/DHutYiT9FCk?feature=share

Meanwhile, it’s not just haircuts Diddy forks out the big bucks for. Young Miami was overcome with emotion on Sunday (Nov. 13), showing off the floral displays “Papi” – her nickname for Diddy- gifted her.  

The City Girls rapper shared several images of the beautiful rose bouquets revealing: “I’m crying. My heart can’t take it.”  

Yung Miami also posted a video revealing it was Diddy who filled her living room with roses. “I love you! Love, Papi,” the florist’s card read.  

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Post Malone & Swae Lee React As ‘Sunflower’ Becomes Highest-Certified Single In RIAA History 

Post Malone and Swae Lee thanked their fans as the pair made history with their single “Sunflower,” which became the highest charting RIAA-certified single ever. 

The 2018 single is now certified 17x platinum making it the most certified in recording history. 

“Sunflower,” part of the Spider-Man: Into The Spiderverse soundtrack, received the certification on Monday (November 14). The song surpassed the previous record holders Lil Nas X and Billy Ray Cyrus. The trio’s “Old Town Road” remix is at 15x platinum.  

Post Malone said the achievement was “pretty damn cool,” telling TMZ he is “super honored” to have the biggest song of all time. He also thanked Swae Lee for doing most of the “heavy lifting” on “Sunflower,” as well as the writing.  

“[Swae Lee] is one of the most talented artists and most beautiful men in the world,” Post Malone said before adding, “I’m so honored to be able to have done a song with him.” 

He called the single a “magical song” that makes you happier when you’re in a good mood and uplifts you if you’re down.  

Meanwhile, his “Sunflower” collaborator showed love to “all the fans,” noting, “You guys made history with us!” Swae Lee also thanked Post Malone and the fictional character Mile Morales. “Glad the music could get the attention and love it deserves,” he said. “So much more to come! SREMMLIFE!” 

It appears “more to come,” also includes further music with his “Sunflower” partner. Post Malone teased that he and Swae Lee have “some special” stuff on the way.  

In the meantime, check out the “Sunflower” video below. 

Post Malone Swae Lee – Sunflower

Megan Thee Stallion Granted Restraining Order Against 1501 Ent. Over AMAs 

Megan Thee Stallion is in the running to win Favorite Female Hip-Hop Artist at this weekend’s American Music Awards (Nov. 20), but a new report reveals the Houston native needed a court to intervene after her label tried to block her from using her music.  

The Houston native is embroiled in a bitter contract dispute with her label 1501 Certified Entertainment. Megan Thee Stallion believes she has fulfilled the terms of her contract, but 1501 disagrees.  

The latest legal action reportedly saw a Texas judge grant the “Plan B” rapper a temporary restraining order against the label and her distributor, 300 Entertainment. TMZ reports Megan Thee Stallion took legal action claiming 1501 took “threatening and retaliatory” steps to prevent Megan from using her own music in connection with the AMAs.  

While she does not detail the steps 1501 and/or 300 Entertainment allegedly made, the judge ruled in her favor. According to TMZ neither company can interfere with the AMAs using Megan’s music. 

The judge issued a hearing for the label to respond to the accusations. However, the court date is Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2 days after the AMA’s this Sunday, and will therefore have no bearing on the awards show.  

Meanwhile, as reported by AllHipHop.com Megan Thee Stallion and Big Sean settled a lawsuit with two Detroit rappers accusing them of copyright infringement.  

Duawn “Go Hard Major” Payne and Harrell “H Matic” James claimed the famous pair ripped off their 2012 song “Krazy.” . They argued Megan Thee Stallion, Big Sean, and 2 Chainz’s 2020 track “Go Crazy,” was “strikingly similar” to their song.  

Exclusive: Grandmaster Jay Releases Sentencing Statement To The Court

“STATEMENT TO FEDERAL COURT AND JUDGE: SENTENCING HEARING” NOVEMBER 9TH, 2022

Good morning Your Honor, Officers and Members of the Court, Officers of The Law both State and Federal, Local Leaders and Activist, Members of The Clergy, Members of my Family, Supporters and Citizens of the United States in attendance.

With honor and respect, I address this court, this judge and this country, that I love and took an oath 33 years ago to defend against all enemies both foreign and domestic. I believe that our Constitution is the cornerstone and the unwavering standard and model of freedom and democracy for the world to follow. The Rights afforded to us as US citizens are unlike any other in the world and justify the name of The Land of The Free and The Home of The Brave however it is up to us as citizens to realize and recognize the boundaries of operating within the framework of those rights. Boundaries contained by morals, values, and most importantly The Rule of Law. Let me begin by acknowledging the growth of my personal knowledge of such boundaries when expressing our 1st and 2nd Amendment Rights as guaranteed under The Constitution. These boundaries, so often crossed when we are swept up in the winds of emotional belief of misinformation, are the very foundation for the need of the construct of law. Without laws our society devolves into anarchy. It has always been my policy to operate within these boundaries, the confines of the law when exercising my
1st and 2nd Amendment Rights.

I spent 27 years of my life embracing my education, working in Corporate America, being a musician, a husband, and eventually joining my states National Guard. I spent the next 7 years serving my country on full time Active Duty after transferring to the United States Army. I served my country with pride and was awarded (2) Good Conduct Medals, (2) Army Commendation Medals, The National Defense Medal, The Non- Commissioned Officers Professional Development Medal, Oversees Service Medal, Armed Forces Reserved Medal, Kuwaiti Star, and the Expert Marksman Medal. I accomplished all of this as a soldier and husband living around the world. I left active duty honorably in 1997 and returned to civilian life as a musician. During this time, I still did not adopt a life of crime.

A return to Active Duty a year later began a tumultuous 6 years that saw an early discharge from the Army, a return to working in Corporate America, a divorce resulting in an incident which brought me into contact with the American civilian justice system. Those charges were dismissed ending in a small fine and a misdemeanor. This 6-year period ended after I went AWOL from an Army Reserve unit, I was allowed to join as an instructor. The fact of the matter is that we all should evolve, change, and grow. I did, in 2006 and I never looked back. The process continues to this day, allow me to elaborate.

In 2006 I changed my entire life after I was blessed to be granted an administrative discharge from the Army Reserves. I relocated to the Mid-West, started a new life, found a new wife, and dedicated my life to my God. I spent the next 16 years being a law-abiding, productive member of our society. I became a successful Information Technology Architect, working for some of the largest corporations in the world such as General Electric, Dell, Warner Brothers, Royal Caribbean and government entities such as the FDA, Veterans Administration, L3Harris and NASA.

I not only became a faithful worshipper of our Lord God but became an ordained Baptist preacher in my church where I preached for 10 years, taught in the children’s church, oversaw the media ministry, taught bible study, sang in the choir, officiated weddings, funerals, and traveled abroad representing my senior pastor at other churches. I became a member of The Transforming Jails Ministry Program ran by the Cincinnati Sheriff’s Department, which allowed me to lead a team of 10 into jails, halfway houses, domestic violence shelters, and juvenile detention and rehabilitation centers to provide worship services as well as extend opportunities to those leaving incarceration, in an effort to reduce their chance of recidivism. I went a step further and completed the Ohio Pastoral Ordination Program to allow me to act as one of several on-call pastors for those serving long term sentences in prisons. My spiritual walk has provided me the opportunity to officiate at several high-profile services such as the funerals of Walter Scott and The Emmanuel 9 and to interact with a sitting president, vice-president, congressmen, house representatives, governors, and state supreme court judges.

I became an activist for equality and fair treatment of all regardless of race, sex, religion, nationality, or age. I believe in the Rights and Laws of this land, but it is no secret that they are not administered equally when it comes to African Americans or people of color. I have traveled from one coast to the other, acting as a voice of reason. Acting as an alternative to senseless violence, rioting, and looting in response to the repetitive incidents of racism and police brutality. I have advocated for solutions both external and internal to the community to address such issues as black on black crime, illiteracy, and voter registration. My efforts have been recognized through awards. Community Leader of The Year Award 2015. Global Peace Award 2020.

I have pursued the office of the Presidency. Stood side by side at The Ground Zero 911 Memorial with Hillary Clinton, Berny Sanders, Donald Trump, Loretta Lynch, Rudy Giuliani, and others in 2015. I have been recognized and won 2 out of 3 Independent Presidential Debates that are still viewed today, and lastly to counter an increasingly volatile deterioration of race relations after the quarantine I created, organized, and lead one of the largest legal 1st and 2nd Amendment expression groups in US history to avoid anarchy between the African American community, white supremist, and law enforcement. With one negligent discharge incident aside, I managed to have this group demonstrate six times in various cities in conjunction with law enforcement and city leadership without one incident of any type. It is only here in Louisville that I have been criminalize and the group demonized when everything I have done for the last 16 years has been to promote communication, mediation, and exercising our constitutional rights within the confines of the law. All of this without becoming a criminal nor conducting criminal activities.

I am remiss to point out that I have been quoted as stating they were just some kids on the rooftop. Must I remind us all that it was a kid that used an AR-15 rifle to kill protestors in Kenosha, it was a kid with an AR-15 rifle that killed 17 students in Florida, that it was kids that killed students in Columbine, it was a kid that killed 28 in Sandy Hook, it was a kid that shot and killed 19 in Uvalde, TX, it was a kid that shot up a school in St Louis, and that it was kids on the roof with AR-15s in downtown Louisville on June 29, 2020 overlooking the Breonna Taylor protest according to an LMPD report. I did not feel threatened after shining my flashlight on this old, unmarked building because I saw no one at all. I’m pretty sure that if I had seen anything labeled police, my response would have been to mention it to the Police Liaison who I met seconds later. I perceived no threat because I saw no weapon pointed at me, but I and countless others feel threatened every day and operate with a sense of heightened awareness in the face of the epidemic of mass shooters where age makes no difference because they are just children.

As one who sought to constrain our expression of our outrage and demands for equal protection under the law regarding the Breonna Taylor killing my organized expressions of the 1st and 2nd amendment were never directed at law enforcement. No threats were ever made toward the LMPD. There was never an intention to engage any law enforcement. The goal was stated several times that it was to attain transparency into the state of the ongoing investigation to appease the chaotic mobs protesting in Louisville. Twice these organized law- abiding citizens demonstrated before the city leadership, requested transparency, and left to avoid any confrontation. It is a sad indictment on the stereotypical perception that African Americans bearing arms must be an evil threat, even when they are legally expressing rights afforded under The Constitution of The United States.

The Scriptures teaches us that faith is the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen. Simply meaning that things we cannot see are working on our behalf behind the scenes to produce things we hope to see. I am hopeful that I will use this experience as a teaching tool to educate others and inspire many of those currently incarcerated. I am hopeful that I shall be allowed to spend this latter quarter of my days as a productive member of society and not be discarded as those who have chosen a life of crime.

I am hopeful that I may use this experience as the cornerstone of teaching the youth the inherent responsibility with exercising their constitutional right. I am hopeful that I may become an inspiration to others to become even more effective law-abiding voices who protest within the confines of the law. It is my intention to work alongside multiple organization and institutions to develop community policing cooperation programs. It is my intention to accept and teach at the institution of higher learning that have extended the opportunity. It is my intention to return to the pulpit as both a proclamator and explainer of why our faith is the true starting point of our restoration of our communities, because I am hopeful that you will see that I am not the threat. I was the example of what you should do to not become one. However, none of us are perfect. We all make mistakes. The principal of Intent vs Impact is in full effect when no matter what your intentions may have been, you have no control over the impact they have over another person.

One of the observations that has strengthened my resolve to help the youth of today is the disproportionate number of young people committing felony level crimes, destroying their lives before they have a chance to realize their potential. Many of these youth are the children of those already incarcerated or product of the foster care system. Others are victims of grinding poverty created by the lack of opportunity, employment, or mentoring figures in their communities. It is my desire to work along with existing organizations to utilize my influence and experiences as the foundation of a community restoration network to target the ills of these neighborhoods that disenfranchise so many of the youth. I have been asked to join The Restorative Justice Coalition Task Force of Louisville to target crime, gun violence, illegal dumping, environmental injustice, criminal injustice, lack of trust with the LMPD, economic injustice, and educational injustice. This experience with the legal system has given me the validation and the lesson learned war story to use as a deterrent to the youth and through your leniency in my subsequent success with The Restorative Coalition would be the spark of inspiration to the youth who believe that crime is their only choice. Mentorship on a community level is the solution I intend to drive. Reducing recidivism is the other objective.

In 21 days, I will see my 59th year on earth. In nearly 60 years I have been a proud US Citizen in my roles as a veteran, preacher, corporate executive, musician, architect, activist, teacher, philanthropist, presidential candidate and family man. I have never been a murderer, drug dealer, kidnapper, child molester, human trafficker, bank robber, or any of the other jobs in the criminal field. I have been a legal firearms owner for 23 years and after leaving the military I have been an achieving law-abiding citizen nonstop for the last 16yrs. As one who has spent years wearing one, I have always had the upmost respect for all those in uniform but disdained police brutality and abuse of authority as anyone should. I have nothing but the deepest remorse for all of those affected by my perceived actions. This situation has not changed my perspective nor level of respect for law enforcement or the laws of our country.

However, this situation raises potential impacts that will change my perspective on justice and fairness in the country I was born in. The impact of not seeing my mother live out her last years as I am approaching 60 and she approaches 80. The impact of not seeing my older sister pass on as she currently battles cancer. The impact of watching a life built over 6 decades becoming a role model and positive influence on today’s generation and generations of tomorrow discarded, as one who has wasted their lives and are not fit to be amongst society. The impact of realizing that justice is truly blind to injustice and is applied unequally to those who did walk the path of opportunities afforded to everyone regardless of skin color, sex, or religion. The impact that The American Dream is conditional.

In closing let me state that I believed the words of The Founding Fathers when they wrote The Constitution and all The Amendments written afterward. They are all the Rule of Law. As judge over this case, I have prayed that you would take all of these things under consideration in your decision process. The Scriptures states “judge not, lest ye be judge”. We will all eventually face our spiritual judge, but today you are my judge. I respectfully ask for leniency for which is another word for mercy. Thank you for listening. May God bless you, this court, and may God continue to bless these United States.

Thank you.

JOHN F. JOHNSON aka GRAND MASTER JAY

Bishop Lamor Whitehead Sues Miss Jones For Calling Him A ‘Drug Dealer’

Blinged-out Bishop is back in court. This time he is not getting sued but doing the suing.

According to the Daily News, Brooklyn Bishop Lamor Whitehead has filed a $50 million defamation lawsuit in Manhattan Supreme Court against WXBK, Paramount Global, the New York Hip-Hop station 94.7 The Block after one of its hosts, Miss Jones, called him a “drug dealer” on the air.

The affront happened on Tuesday, Sept. 13, months after the preacher was robbed during a live church service. In addition to calling him a “drug dealer,” she also said he was “using the church to hide that old drug money.”


She also said his church, Leaders of Tomorrow International Ministry, “is where he’s probably still doing his dirty work.”

The Gucci-wearing Brooklyn native took to social media to talk about the lawsuit.

He said her remarks caused injury to his reputation.

“Miss Jones’ statements exposed plaintiff to public contempt, ridicule, aversion, and disgrace,” the lawsuit claims. “Miss Jones’ statements imply criminal activity and injured plaintiff’s reputation as a pastor.”

The company that actually owns The Block is not mentioned in the suit.

“We are aware of the lawsuit and are investigating,” an Audacy representative said in a statement. “We have no further comment at this time.”

Snoop Dogg Nominated For Songwriters Hall Of Fame

Snoop Dogg may join Jay-Z, Missy Elliott, Pharrell and Jermaine Dupri in the Songwriters Hall of Fame.

The Death Row Records owner received a nomination for the 2023 Songwriters Hall of Fame. Snoop Dogg was nominated along with Sade, Teddy Riley, Gloria Estefan and Patti Smith, among others.

Voting for the 2023 Songwriters Hall of Fame concludes in December. The induction ceremony will be held in New York on June 15, 2023.

Snoop Dogg became a nominee less than a week after Universal Pictures announced it was developing a biopic about him. The untitled movie will be directed by Allen Hughes, whose filmography includes Menace II Society and Dead Presidents.

“I waited a long time to put this project together because I wanted to choose the right director, the perfect writer, and the greatest movie company I could partner with that could understand the legacy that I’m trying to portray on screen, and the memory I’m trying to leave behind,” Snoop Dogg said. “It was the perfect marriage. It was holy matrimony, not holy macaroni.”

The film’s script will be written by Joe Robert Cole, who co-wrote Marvel’s Black Panther movie and the newly-released sequel Wakanda Forever. Snoop Dogg’s own Death Row Pictures will produce the biopic.

Nick Cannon Says He Pays More Than $3M In Child Support

With 11 children (and one on the way), how much do you think Nick Cannon pays in child support?

According to several sources, the “Wild ‘N Out” creator and star is kicking out more than $3,000,000 a year.

In an interview with posted The Neighborhood Talk on Friday, Nov. 11, Cannon said, “I definitely spend a lot more than that on my children annually.”

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He also added, “I don’t plan to ever have to participate in the governmental system of child.”

As reported by AllHipHop.com, the rapper has fathered a small basketball team (and bench).

His oldest children, his first set of twins Moroccan and Monroe (aka Roc and Roe), 11-year-olds with megastar Mariah Carey.

Cannon has three children with Brittany Bell (Golden, 5; Powerful, 1; and Rise, 1 month) and three children Abby De La Rosa (twins Zion and Zillion,1, and their new daughter Beautiful born on Friday, Nov. 11).

One of his lovers, Bre Tiesi, has a 4-month-old named Legendary, while Lanisha Cole has a 2-month-old named Onyx.

Lastly, Alyssa Scott, one of his ladies, had a son named Zen, who died in December succumbing to brain cancer at 5 months. Now, the couple will be welcoming their second child together, which will make up Cannon’s 12th child when born.

Anti-Defamation League Prez Bashes Dave Chappelle’s SNL Monologue

After his controversial opening monologue on a recent episode of “Saturday Night Life,” Dave Chappelle has found himself in hot waters— swimming in the murky seas of antisemitism that his friend Kanye West has recently drowned in.

According to the Anti-Defamation League’s president, the network, by not censoring or editing Chappelle’s bit on Ye, was popularizing hate against Jewish people.

Jonathan Greenblatt took to his Twitter and wrote, “We shouldn’t expect @DaveChappelle to serve as society’s moral compass but disturbing to see @nbcsnl not just normalize but popularize #antisemitism.”

“Why are Jewish sensitivities denied or diminished at almost every turn? Why does our trauma trigger applause?” he continued.

Like most of Chappell’s jokes, this monologue was laced with pushing-the-edge satire and socio-political commentary— often mocking political correctness.

He said, “I denounce anti-Semitism in all its forms and stand with my friends in the Jewish community … and that, Kanye, is how you buy yourself some time.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_m-gO0HSCYk

Chappelle then joked, “I’ve probably been doing this for 35 years now and early in my career I learned there are two words in the English language you should never say together in sequence and those words are ‘The’ and ‘Jews.’ I never heard someone do good after they said that.”

He also mocked Kanye and Kyrie Irving for their remarks, mentioning Ye’s mental illness.

The D.C. native went on to talk about growing up with Jewish people, counting many as his friend, saying, “so I’m not freaked out by your culture,” and even recalling jokingly asking someone once, “Why do some of your people dress like Run-DMC?” referencing some sects of Jewish who were large black hats, like the Rock and Roll Hall of Famers.

“Kanye got in so much trouble, Kyrie got in trouble,” Chappelle went on to say, adding, “I’ve been to Hollywood — don’t want you to get mad at me, I’m just telling you I’ve been to Hollywood, this is just what I saw,” he also said. “It’s a lot of Jews.”

“Like a lot. But that doesn’t mean anything, you know what I mean? There are a lot of Black people in Ferguson, Missouri, it doesn’t mean we run the place.”

One punch line was that it was not delusional to think “that Jews run show business,” but to the contrary “it’s a crazy thing to say out loud at a time like this.”

Twitter has come out in support of Chappelle. Check out what fans tweeted.

21 Savage Insists He Wasn’t Trying To Diss Nas With Relevance Comments

21 Savage claimed he wasn’t trying to insult Nas when the 30-year-old rapper questioned the Illmatic creator’s relevance.

Nas’ relevance recently became a topic of discussion on the Clubhouse app. 21 Savage suggested Nas is no longer relevant during a Clubhouse conversation, but the Atlanta-bred artist downplayed his remarks after his opinion went viral on social media.

“I would never disrespect nas or any legend who paved the way for me y’all be tryna take stuff and run with it,” he wrote on Twitter.

21 Savage suggested Nas wasn’t relevant in the Clubhouse chat but praised the legendary MC for making good music. 21 Savage also commended the influential artist for maintaining a loyal following.

“I don’t feel like he’s relevant,” the Slaughter Gang leader said. “He’s not relevant. He just has a loyal ass fanbase. He just has a loyal fanbase, and he still makes good ass music. What’s y’all definition of relevant, bro?”

Nas dropped his new album King’s Disease III on Friday (November 11). The project marked another collaboration with producer Hit-Boy. The two previously worked together on the first King’s Disease album, its sequel and a project titled Magic.

Earlier this month, 21 Savage teamed up with Drake for a collaborative album titled Her Loss. The project debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200.

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Cameron Airborne Previews Forthcoming Project “Conversations With Myself”

Cameron Airborne is here to tell his story, and he wears his heart on his sleeves in each of his releases. The rising star originally hails from Long Island, New York, but moved to South Florida at the age of 9 after his parents divorced. Thankfully, music would be his saving grace. 

Getting his initial start as a guitarist for a rock band, it wasn’t long before Cameron discovered his own talents as a vocalist and recording artist. And while life came at him in all different directions and avenues, from drug addiction to legal run-ins, it was always music that would pull him through. During his downtimes, Cameron would start writing and recording his own records… eventually leading to his debut project Unspoken Words released when he was just 16 years old.

In describing himself, Cameron states he’s “a multi-genre type of artist. I play guitar, so I originally started in a metal band and I used that to transition over to what I’m doing now. It’s almost a fusion of rap rock… pretty much they don’t have any other reason but to f### with it.”

Fast forward to today, Cameron Airborne unveils his newest single and visual for “Feel Right,” following the success of his last single “Lower.” On the business tip, Cameron has his own strain called Airborne OG, and his own cultivation facility and dispensary.

AllHipHop spoke with Cameron Airborne in downtown Los Angeles to discuss his background in music, his new singles, getting sober, having his own weed brand, forthcoming album, and more!

AllHipHop: Talk about being from Boynton Beach, what was that like growing up?.

Cameron Airborne: It’s an hour from Miami, so it’s right in the center of South Florida. It’s a big cultural [place], good music scene out there too. Just like anything else, things get oversaturated. You gotta branch out sometimes.

AllHipHop: There’s a lot of artists from South Florida!

Cameron Airborne: Yeah, for sure. It’s definitely a hotspot right now. Music-wise, there’s always something going on. There’s always events, a lot of people bubbling in that area.

AllHipHop: When did you fall in love with music?

Cameron Airborne: Young actually, probably when I was 10 or 11. Around the time, I started playing guitar. It helps me free my mind.

AllHipHop: How’d you get your name?

Cameron Airborne: It’s a play on my last name, because my last name is Flyer. A friend of mine would call me Airborne, and it stuck.

AllHipHop: You played guitar in a rock band, when did you start recording with your own voice?

Cameron Airborne: Probably when I was 14, I transitioned over to rap, I guess you would call it. I wasn’t really working well with others, getting the band together. Doing it solo was a lot easier to stay consistent.

AllHipHop: You just put out “Feel Right,” what inspired that record?

Cameron Airborne: That’s one of those records that comes from a place: when you’re trying to deal with a lot of different problems or things you have going on, you use different substances to drown it out and make you feel right.

AllHipHop: Talk about your journey getting sober, because obviously it’s not easy.

Cameron Airborne: I got into that stuff at a young age, it just brought me down a dark path. But with anything like that, there’s a light at the end of the tunnel. It’s important to talk about it because there’s things that people aren’t comfortable talking about, that they’d be more comfortable if they knew that other people related or felt the same way. It’s important to incorporate that.

AllHipHop: Do you mind if I asked what it was for?

Cameron Airborne: Yeah, I was doing coke and different pills. Very young age, like 10 or 11. Super young. Which honestly, I think is a better thing in my eyes because I got out of it at a young age also. It put my head on straight and let me see things in a different perspective at a younger age.

AllHipHop: How is music a coping mechanism for you?

Cameron Airborne: It’s one of those things when I’m recording, it’s just me so there’s not really any judgment. You just do it, just feel it out.

AllHipHop: What were you doing before the music?

Cameron Airborne: Selling weed. [laughs]

AllHipHop: How does weed improve your life?

Cameron Airborne: Weed is a blessing. Honestly, it saved my life. I have a cannabis company now, Airborne Farms. I have my own strain, Airborne OG. I have a cultivation facility. It’s a vertical branch so I have a dispensary and everything processing. That helped me a lot with my life because it gave me more of a direction. It’s something else that I have a super strong passion for. It’s important to really try to do as much as possible with that because it’s a big, big role in my life.

AllHipHop: How does it help with the music too?

Cameron Airborne: Definitely, it gets me in my zone creative wise. When I’m in the studio, I’m definitely burning it down. [laughs] It definitely makes me feel alert.

AllHipHop: What were you going through recording “Lower?”

Cameron Airborne: That was a super, super dark time in my life. That was the first song that I did completely acoustic. It’s an acoustic track with just me,the guitar and vocals. It just came out correctly. It’s one of those songs where less is more. I took that approach and let the lyrics speak for themselves. It’s a real sentimental record that people can relate to.

AllHipHop: What are you planning on releasing next? Is there a project coming soon?

Cameron Airborne: I have a project that’s about to come out, it’s called Conversations with Myself. It’ll probably come out first quarter. “Lower” and “Feel Right” are actually two singles off the project, so we’re gonna go into that first quarter 2023.

AllHipHop: Talk about the independent grind.

Cameron Airborne: It’s hard. With anything else, you gotta stay consistent. It’s a rollercoaster, so it’ll go up and down. Sometimes it’ll be really good, then it can get stagnant, then it can be really good again. You gotta be prepared to have that emotional ride, that up and down kind of thing.

AllHipHop: What is it you want fans to get from your story?

Cameron Airborne: I want them to feel like they can have something to relate to, that’s not letting them stay behind closed doors. Other people feel the way that they do so if they can take that from my music, maybe they can feel better about talking about it themselves. Whether it’s depression, addiction, even being happy. People don’t like to talk about that they’re happy, they think it’s corny to say that. It’s important to really talk about your emotions.

AllHipHop: What’s your relationship with Jackboy?

Cameron Airborne: That’s the homie. Being from Florida, we linked up at a good time. Just mutual people. We got in the studio and made a banger. It’s been doing pretty well.

AllHipHop: Talk about your clothing brand Lost World, and your love for fashion.

Cameron Airborne: Fashion definitely goes hand in hand with music. I’ve been working on a clothing company, Lost World. It’s set to release the same time as my album, it’s going to coincide with the rollout. Fashion is definitely important. Lost World is self-explanatory in the title. It’s for people that feel lost, that don’t fit in. It’s somewhere they could call home.

AllHipHop: Have you always loved fashion?

Cameron Airborne: Yes and no. I didn’t really care for it. I wouldn’t say bummy, but didn’t really care how I’d dress. It’s more important to dress correctly, because you don’t really need designer or nothing like that. But if you put something on the right way, you can still be fly as f###.

AllHipHop: Do you have a favorite tattoo? You’re pretty covered.

Cameron Airborne: Yeah, probably my neck. The owl, I got that in LA. Daniel Silva did it, he’s done some tats on like Trippie Redd, Russ, and a couple other people. He snapped on that. That’s one of my favorites, then this one too. [points to Jimi Hendrix tat]

AllHipHop: What does the owl mean?

Cameron Airborne: It symbolizes wisdom and guidance. Really, to keep your head on the right path. I like the Jimi too because this is my inspiration, what got me into music, guitar, all that stuff.

AllHipHop: Any goals for yourself at this point in your career?

Cameron Airborne: Yeah, just stay on the right path and keep grinding. Be consistent with the music, and everything will fall into place.

AllHipHop: Anything else you want to let the people know?

Cameron Airborne: Make sure you check on my album, Conversations with Myself. It’s coming out very soon. Airborne Farms in Oklahoma, brand new dispensary opening in Tulsa. Make sure you pull up on me, get the Airborne OG in store. I might even do a listening, release party there. It’s gonna be dope.

21 Savage Says Nas Is Irrelevant. Is He Right?

21 Savage should wish to be as good as Nas. There is absolutely no musical comparison between the two artists. Yet 21 feels his elder statesman is irrelevant.

Clubhouse has become one of 21’s favorite places to express his thoughts openly. The topic of discussion started with longevity and eventually transitioned to which 90’s rappers could still drop albums.

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Nas’ name came up and 21 generally dismissed any notion that Nas is considered relevant. Despite the recent release of King’s Disease 3 being one of the most anticipated albums of the year, the UK-born rapper attributed Nas’ success to a loyal fan base.

https://twitter.com/MilagroGramz__/status/1592060875959308293?

Clearly, 21 Savage is riding off the success of his Drake-assisted Her Loss album. As he should, the project is currently number one on the Billboard charts and moved over 400,000 units in the first week of sales.

However, let’s not act like Nas needs a Drake feature or Drake’s help to go number one. For Nas, it’s a case of been there and done that six times already. Not to mention he’s dropped five albums in the last four years.

One panelist interjected to ask the “Savage Mode” rapper if relevancy was only determined by the youth. To which the rapper replied, “controls popular opinion, is closely connected, or is appropriate to what’s being done in order to be considered.”

By his dictionary definition, Nas is still very much relevant. While 21 did say is that Nas still makes good music. Who is relevant is a matter of perspective.

Keep in mind Nas’ lyrical content still speaks to the mood of the times.

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GloRilla Appreciates Shoutout From Nas On ‘King’s Disease III’ Album

GloRilla felt honored to be mentioned by Nas on his song “Til My Last Breath” produced by Hit-Boy.

The Interscope Records artist reacted to the Nas shoutout when TMZ cameras caught up with her in New York. GloRilla had a big smile on her face while she chatted about the recognition from a Hip Hop legend.

“That’s love!” she said. “I love that so much. Nas is a big legend, for real. That’s super big.”

GloRilla emerged as one of Hip Hop’s rising stars over the past few months, but she remained humble despite her growing fame. The Memphis-bred rapper noted she never thought “in a million years” that someone like Nas would shout her out on a song.

Nas dropped his King’s Disease III album with Hit-Boy on Friday (November 11). The album’s bonus track “Til My Last Breath” referenced GloRilla in the chorus.

“When she with me, she GloRilla, F.N.F,” Nas rapped.

GloRilla also dropped her Anyways, Life’s Great… EP on November 11. The project served as her major label debut. Earlier this year, she signed with Interscope as part of a deal with Yo Gotti’s CMG imprint.

Listen to her shoutout on Nas and Hit-Boy’s song “Til My Last Breath” below.

A Famous Producer’s Son Was Caught Up In Racist Teacher’s Rant

How would you feel if your caucasian teacher referred to himself as a superior race but your black father makes nearly 80 times his annual salary selling beats?

Southside and the 808 Mafia have turned into the top choice for beats if you want to score a Hip-Hop hit. But he probably wanted to put the beats on his son’s racist teacher.

Melo, better known as Baby Sizzle was in class at Bohls Middle School in Pflugerville, Texas when he began to get into an open discussion with his teacher. Given all the current events surrounding race and religion, we can’t understand why this man debating with children.

Nonetheless, race takes center stage in the conversation. The teacher says “deep down in my heart, I’m ethnocentric which means that I believe my race is superior.”

The classroom of mostly black students reacts in a collective uproar as the teacher clarifies his comments by saying he believes everyone knows but is afraid to admit it. To make matters worse, the children say they have less respect for the teacher.

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Mello and his dad both posted the conversation to Instagram. Southside called attention to his son’s right to education being denied while also speaking in defense of all the melanated children in the classroom.

Pflugerville School Superintendent Dr. Douglas Killian issued the following statement:

We are aware of an inappropriate conversation a teacher at Bohls Middle School had with students this week during an advisory class. This interaction does not align with our core beliefs as a district. The video of the conversation includes statements that we find wholly inappropriate. The teacher has been placed on administrative leave while Human Resources conducts an investigation.

It’s funny how there’s all this talk surrounding the beliefs of Kyrie and Ye. Yet they aren’t the people responsible for teaching children of the masses. Somehow the teacher’s egregious conduct is only enough for a suspension.

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New York Has Big Plans To Celebrate Hip Hop’s 50th Anniversary

New York City partnered with the Universal Hip Hop Museum to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Hip Hop.

Mayor Eric Adams and several Hip Hop legends spoke about the celebration at a press conference on Monday (November 14). Deputy Mayor Sheena Wright revealed the city will team with the Universal Hip Hop Museum for a variety of events in 2023.

“The city is proud to really announce our formal partnership with the Universal Hip Hop Museum, which is going to be dedicated to preserving and telling that history for generations,” Wright said. “And we are partnering with the museum to really have a host of events and activities during 2023 – the 50th anniversary of Hip Hop.”

Universal Hip Hop Museum chairman Rocky Bucano added, “I’m just so proud that the City of New York and the state of New York have given their support to the Universal Hip Hop Museum. We will open in 2024, and it will be the greatest celebration in 2023 to really demonstrate how Hip Hop has touched every part of today’s society.”

Roxanne Shanté was one of the Hip Hop pioneers who attended the presser at City Hall. She discussed her excitement for the upcoming festivities in New York.

“When they first approached me and told me, ‘Listen, what we’re going to do is we are going to do 50 events, 50 days celebrating 50 years of Hip Hop,’ I was like, ‘That’s a lot of 50s,” she said. “But I am honored to be able to participate knowing that seeing the spin that has been taken with New York City and knowing that we’re getting ready to celebrate something like Hip Hop here in New York City, where it was.”

Grandmaster Flash was another legendary figure in attendance at City Hall. He reflected on Hip Hop’s longevity during his time at the podium.

“I’ve been called a legend a lot of times,” he said. “Legends die young. A lot of times legends don’t get a chance to see what they’ve done in full fruition. And I’m talking to all the Hip Hoppers there and all the Hip Hoppers around the world, I want to say thank you. Because when I did this, this thing could have been a hell no … It’s a blessing to be here to see this.”

Flash concluded, “We did this for absolutely nothing. And now [Hip Hop] is unarguably the biggest music on planet Earth, and I want to say thank God we here.”

Watch the entire press conference below.

Roberta Flack Suffering Can No Longer Sing After ALS Diagnosis

Roberta Flack has been diagnosed with a neurodegenerative disease and can no longer sing.

In a statement, manager Suzanne Koga announced that the Grammy Award-winning artist has been battling amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).

“(The disease) has made it impossible to sing and not easy to speak,” she said. “But it will take a lot more than ALS to silence this icon.”

The news comes ahead of the premiere of Roberta, a documentary about the singer’s life, at the DOC NYC film festival in New York City on Thursday night.

Reflecting on the project, Flack shared that she hopes it will inspire a new generation of talent.

“I have long dreamed of telling my story to children about that first green piano that my father got for me from the junkyard in the hope that they would be inspired to reach for their dreams,” the 85-year-old commented. “I want them to know that dreams can come true with persistence, encouragement from family and friends, and most of all belief in yourself.”

Roberta Flack, known for the songs “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face” and “Killing Me Softly with His Song,” suffered a stroke in 2016.

Kandi Burruss Is Getting Sued After Woman Shot On Her Property In 2020

R&B singer and businesswoman Kandi Burruss is being sued for a shooting at her restaurant Old Lady Gang in 2020.

According to AllHipHop.com, on February 14th, 2020, a gunman barged into Kandi’s Old Lady Gang in East Point and started shooting at a patron inside the prominent establishment.

One man was targeted in the shooting. However, the gunman also hit two innocent bystanders during Valentine’s Day attack.

The two bystanders were a woman named Kiya Humphries and her 14-year-old daughter Tammy Johnson.

According to Radar Online, the woman is suing Kandi’s restaurant, the owners of the shopping center where the OLG is located, and the security team hired by the center.

“While waiting to be seated at Old Lady Gang, a man wearing a red tracksuit entered Old Lady Gang and was near the front of the restaurant,” the complaint said. “Shortly afterward, a second man entered Old Lady Gang.”

“The man wearing the red tracksuit began shooting. Kiya Humphries was shot in the right calf,” the complaint added.

Johnson also was shot, and her wound required multiple medical surgeries, therapy, and counseling.

“Kiya Humphries has experienced severe physical and emotional pain and suffering as a result of the gunshot wound she sustained,” the suit reads, saying, Kiya “will continue to experience severe physical and emotional pain and suffering as a result of the gunshot wound she sustained.”

Humphries also alleges in the lawsuit the restaurant has also had a lot of violence and that the singer did not keep people safe.

Are Young Dolph’s Alleged Killers Really Connected To CMG Records? The Net Investigates.

An old photo of Yo Gotti’s brother standing next to the alleged mastermind behind Young Dolph’s death has emerged and sent internet sleuths into overdrive.

As previously reported, Hernandez Govan was indicted on conspiracy and murder charges. The streets of Memphis are buzzing as fans believe his daughter LottaCash Desto paid a fatal price for his actions.

The buzz may be growing closer to a Memphis Grizzlies growl. Big Jook is the older brother of Yo Gotti. Fans are wondering why he’s standing side by side with Govan. The date the photo was taken remains unknown. However, Jook is wearing what appears to be an iced-out Collective Music Group pendant.

Not to mention, the beef between Yo Gotti and Young Dolf was no secret. The beef seemed to grow from trading shots on social media to eventually trading shots on wax. Back in September 2017, Dolph was shot in L.A. A member of Gotti’s entourage was implicated in the crime, but the charges were later dropped.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nktQwPwlIEI

And, Blac Youngsta was accused of, but exonerated of, firing 100 shots at Dolph in Charlotte, North Carolina.

However, Howard “Keon” Wright, who worked closely with Gotti’s label was sent to prison for 14 years after admitting to the shooting.

Big Jook prefers to focus on the recent success of GloRilla and the rest of CMG’s budding roster. He took to Instagram to congratulate BigGlo. And despite inaccurate reports, Big Jook has not been arrested for anything.

In fact, he recently showed himself enjoying some time on the beach and enjoying the incredible success of CMG and celebrating their mom’s birthday.

On the other hand, Dolph fans feel like the walls are closing in with the recent arrest of Govan.

They let their voices be heard in the comment section—heavy statements backed by dolphin emojis. “Indictment season 🐬” commented one user. Another user suggested it was only a matter of time before he’d be in jail fighting over ramen.

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